June 8th, 2013

Taming the Trash at the Calgary Stampede

stampede-trash

For over 100 years, the Calgary Stampede has been hootin’ and hollerin’, and one of its greatest traditions is the Pancake Breakfast. Unfortunately, with hundreds of these festivities throughout town, the annual Stampede ‘trash hangover’ is getting a bit wild.

Now an innovative community collaboration is helping one community association host their annual flapjack festivities without the waste. London Drugs is sponsoring Green Calgary to divert waste from the Rocky Ridge Royal Oak Community Association’s (RRROCA) Stampede breakfast and inspire other community groups to celebrate Stampede with sustainability in mind.

Last year, over 2,000 people attended the RRROCA Stampede Breakfast, leaving garbage bins overflowing.
Green Calgary and Green Events consultant, Lauren Minuk, will be working with RRROCA to divert as much waste as possible, with re-usable plates, water stations, composting, recycling and more.

Come see what a greener breakfast looks like July 6, 2013 from 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the North West Family Church (10307 Eamon Road NW).

“Our commitment extends beyond our stores, to the communities we serve and into the homes of our customers,” says Clint Mahlman, Senior Vice President and COO of London Drugs. “Sponsoring waste reduction at the RRROCA Stampede Breakfast is a natural extension of our in-store waste reduction and recycling programs.”

Giddy-Up!

June 6th, 2013

London drugs’ recycling efforts recognized with an Emerald Award

emerald-award-mccauslandThank you to the Alberta Emerald Foundation for recognizing our recycling efforts with an Emerald Award! We are truly honoured, and very proud of this award.

London Drugs received top honours for our ‘What’s the Green Deal?’ program and corporate recycling efforts at the 2013 Emerald Awards held June 6 in Edmonton, AB. Taking home the ‘waste wise’ prize in the large business category, London Drugs was one of 32 finalists out of a record number of nominations from across Alberta this year.

Maury McCausland, Administrator of Retail Operations, was in Edmonton to accept the award.

“London Drugs has stewarded environmental efforts for a number of years, and we have made strides through our waste diversion programs,” said McCausland. “It’s truly an honour to be recognized for these efforts. It’s not only a testament to our team of employees who all aspire to make a difference, but also our loyal customers who care to participate in the recycling programs we offer.”

Thank you to all our staff and customers who have worked hard to be waste wise. Your continued participation in the recycling programs is outstanding, and we proudly share this award with all of you.

May 28th, 2013

More FSC Certifications for our office papers means you can print with forests in mind.

FSC-papers

A recent press release from HP makes it official that their HP office papers are now FSC certified. Our Hammermill brands and Domtar EarthChoice papers also bear the FSC logo, meaning that you can now feel confident that office paper you buy at London Drugs has come from well-managed forests.

The Forest Stewardship Council has a reputation as one of the most rigorous and credible independent certification standards available. Fibre from certified forests is tracked all the way to the consumer through the FSC Chain of Custody system.

Post-consumer recycled paper content helps save even more trees, and the greenest office paper of all is the one you don’t print. So choose both your papers and the projects you decide to print with care.

April 22nd, 2013

Earth Day 2013

April 20th, 2013

London Drugs is a 2013 Emerald Awards Finalist!

emerald-awards

The Alberta Emerald Foundation recently announced its 2013 Annual Emerald Award finalists, and London Drugs is pleased to be a finalist in the large business category for the ‘What’s the Green Deal?’ program.  London Drugs is one of 32 finalists – out of a record 123 nominations this year – across 11 awards categories.

Since the 2008 launch of ‘What’s the Green Deal?’ London Drugs now tallies more than 42 million pounds of materials recycled including: Styrofoam, batteries, computers, televisions, cell phones, paper, plastic, cardboard, and metals.

Our overall waste diversion rate rose from 67% in 2011 to 74% in 2012. And individual stores have advanced even further with a chain-wide goal for all London Drugs stores to achieve 95% waste diversion by 2015.

In Alberta, the Oliver Square West store in Edmonton posted an impressive 93% recycling rate.

The Emerald Awards recognize and reward the excellent environmental initiatives undertaken each year by youth, educators, corporations, individuals, not-for-profit associations, community groups and governments. Winners of the 22nd annual Emerald Awards will be announced at an awards ceremony on June 6, 2013 at the Shoctor Theatre in Edmonton, Alberta.
Albertans are passionate about balancing the development of this province’s rich resources with environmental stewardship, and London Drugs is happy to help.

March 29th, 2013

Yes, Virginia, there is a Fair Trade, Organic Easter Bunny.

camino-bunny-MEDWith all the excitement, hopping around the house on a Sunday morning and eating candy before breakfast, you can also enjoy an extra warm fuzzy feeling from this Fair Trade, Organic Milk Chocolate Easter Bunny from Camino, available at London Drugs.

Camino is a Canadian brand of fair trade and organic food products, owned by the Ottawa-based La Siembra Co-operative. La Siembra works directly with 23 producer co-ops, supporting more than 39,500 family farmers.

According to their website, Camino sources ingredients from co-operatives of family farmers in Bolivia, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Guatemala, India, Indonesia, Madagascar, Panama, Paraguay, Peru and Sri Lanka.

The bunny contains 83% FairTrade Certified ingredients by dry weight, and is certified organic by QAI. Even the box is made with 100% recycled paper cardboard.
So why not add a taste of fair trade to the Easter Basket this year? It might just put a little extra spring into your step.

March 26th, 2013

Where does London Drugs recycling go?

Circuit boards can contain gold and other precious metals – Photo: L. Craig

For most of our customers, once their recycling is dropped off, it’s out of sight, out of mind. But for London Drugs, the recycling bin is just the beginning of the process.
We do our homework, choosing recyclers who know where your materials go and what happens to them. This is especially important when it comes to electronics, which can contain some pretty hazardous materials.
So here are some quick notes on what goes where when you bring it to our big Blue Box.

Electronics – TV’s, computers, VCR’s, printers and other electronics are shipped to either GEEP (Alberta, Sask. & Man.) or E-Cycle  where they are separated into components such as plastic, glass, circuit boards, tubes, and various metals. Non-toxic materials are sorted and bundled for sale as commodities for remanufacture. Both GEEP and E-Cycle are certified through ISO 9001:2008 and ISO 14001:2004.
Circuit boards and TV tubes are sent to smelters where they are safely melted down and their precious metals recovered.
NO London Drugs electronics for recycling are shipped offshore unprocessed.

GEN-diss-line

An Electronics Disassembly Line  – Photo: L.Craig

Small Appliances – As with electronics, all our small appliances are disassembled in Canada and separated into commodities.

Cell Phones and Batteries – These items are handled through the Call-2-Recycle program, the only free used battery and cellphone collection program in North America. Cellphones are recycled, refurbished and/or resold. When resold, a portion of the proceeds are donated to select charities. None of the broken down material makes its way into landfills. Batteries are processed at North American facilities, in BC, Ontario, Quebec and Pennsylvania, for recovery of cadmium and lithium.

L5140504

Recycled Paper returns to London Drugs as products.

Paper and CardboardCascades Recovery is our partner for recycling paper and cardboard. It is sorted and bundled up at their Surrey facility and sent to Canadian mills for remanufacture into paper products. Some of our recycled cardboard even makes its way back on to store shelves as recycled toilet tissue!

Soft Plastics, Bottles and Medication Containers – These are also collected by Cascades Recovery and sent to Orbis or Merlin Plastics in Delta, BC.

Styrofoam™ – All expanded polystyrene from London Drugs packaging that customers return is sent to Foam Only in Coquitlam, BC where it is compressed for remanufacture as polystyrene. This is a process that uses no heat and releases no toxins.

Light Bulbs, CFL Bulbs and Fluorescent Tubes – Compact Fluorescent bulbs contain a small amount of mercury, so they must be handled with care. All of our light products are recycled through the LightRecycle program, managed by ProductCare. Bulbs are crushed in a controlled environment, so all toxins are filtered out and recovered.

As you can see, recycling is a complex science that goes well beyond the Blue Box. By working with top suppliers, we are doing our best to ensure we are part of the solution, not creating new problems down the line. If you want to know more, follow us on Twitter @WTGreenDeal, or comment below. We’re happy to talk more recycling with you.

February 28th, 2013

What’s the Green Deal with half-empty medication bottles?

Photo: L.Craig

Photo: L.Craig

We occasionally get email from customers who are puzzled at the extra space in their bottle of London Drugs medications. This is one of those situations where the most effective environmental choice comes up against practicality in a calculation that can be a bit more complex than it first appears.

London Drugs buyers need to source packaging for a very wide range of medication quantities and sizes. But, as you can imagine, finding, ordering, packaging and shipping a wide array of bottle sizes drives up time and cost through the whole process. From an environmental perspective, it can also be more energy-efficient at the factory to produce fewer sizes of bottles, once set-up, start-up and shipping/packing materials are considered for each run. As well, for examples like the Melatonin pictured above, a bottle small enough to hold those 60 tablets snugly would not be big enough to display all of the ingredients and information – in both official languages.

So in order to keep our prices low, our team made the choice to go with three or four basic bottle sizes instead of over 30 bottle sizes. Which means that, unfortunately, for some products, there may be more air than we would like. It isn’t a perfect solution, and we will continue to work to find solutions that balance all the factors as best we can.

We do specify a readily recyclable #1PETE plastic for our bottles, and all medicine containers returned to our stores are recycled. So whatever their size, please Bring Back the Pack.

If you want to make a real environmental difference, please don’t forget to return unused medications. Flushing them down the toilet does not really get rid of them, as our waste treatment systems are not designed to break down these complex compounds. As a result, fish stocks can be adversely affected. (Read more on our blog here)

In the meantime, we do appreciate customers keeping the pressure on for us to do better. And we will keep working from our end to  monitor our bottling system and choices.

February 25th, 2013

London Drugs is North America’s first retailer to offer drop-off recycling for BRITA filters

BRITA-filter-recycling-London-DrugsThis is great news for people who like to filter their own water at home (thus saving waste from bottling and delivery) but who don’t like the idea of throwing old filters in the landfill. Now recycling those filters is as easy as looking for the big Brita box at your local London Drugs. The filters are then shipped to Preserve®, the leading maker of 100 percent recycled household consumer goods.

Recycled filters get a new life as 100 percent recycled products such as toothbrushes, cups and cutting boards.
The filter ingredients — activated carbon for creating great-tasting water and ion exchange resin that reduces mercury, copper, cadmium and zinc that might be found in tap water — will be regenerated for alternative use or converted into energy. Preserve has calculated that the benefits of keeping Brita® filters out of landfills and making them into Preserve products outweigh the impact of shipping them for recycling through this program. All Preserve plastic products are also recyclable, giving Brita® filter materials a third life.

If you aren’t near a London Drugs, you can still participate in the program. Simply mail your filters to Preserve:

  • Dry the filter by shaking off excess water and setting it in a dry place for at least three days.
  • Wrap the filter in a plastic grocery bag, then pack it in a box. (Boxes and bags will be recycled.) If possible, send multiple filters at a time.
  • Mail filters via ground shipping to: Preserve Gimme 5, 823 NYS Rte 13, Cortland, NY 13045

Any way you filter it, it’s a great Green Deal!

February 15th, 2013

One more reason to bring your old medications back to London Drugs: Study shows anti-anxiety drugs can affect fish in the environment

Photo: Rainer von Brandis, iStockPhoto

Photo: Rainer von Brandis, iStockPhoto

It’s easy to forget that what we put in the toilet eventually ends up in our rivers, lakes and oceans. But water treatment plants are not designed to remove the complex medications we can carelessly flush down to them. And now a new study shows that traces of these drugs could be making fish populations less than mellow.

A research team at Sweden’s Umea University exposed young wild European perch to minute concentrations of the anti-anxiety drug oxazepam and then carefully measured feeding, schooling, movement and hiding behaviour. They found that drug-exposed fish moved more, fed more aggressively, hid less and tended to school less than unexposed fish.

Scientists are concerned these lower exposures may alter things like animals’ mating behaviour or its ability to catch food or its ability to avoid being eaten — effects that, over time, that could really affect a population.

So please, NEVER throw old medications out with the garbage or in the toilet. Bring them to the London Drugs Pharmacy and we will dispose of them safely.
Somewhere, a fish will thank you.

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