You might call Rehrig Pacific Logistics’ director of innovation and operations, Todd Rodewald, a modern day Rumpelstiltskin. But instead of turning straw into gold, he’s spearheading his company’s efforts to help retailers and manufacturers uncover the value hidden in their trash.
Rehrig Pacific Logistics (RPL) offers asset management and reverse logistics with a specific emphasis on packaging (pallets, corrugated boxes, reusable plastic containers and shrink wrap). The company has two facilities to recycle wood and industrial plastic waste.
“This is an evolution of a full circle service,” says Rodewald. “In addition to tracking assets, customers work with us to manage their waste. We turn their waste streams into a value-add.”
RPL’s Pennsylvania micro-mill takes 100% post-consumer pallet wood waste, grinds it, mixes it with formaldehyde-free binding resin, and subjects the blend to heat and pressure. “Typically, pallet wood waste is converted into low-value fuel or mulch,” explains Rodewald. “This process yields a usable building material similar to particle board.”
Both boards and manufacturing process are in the process of gaining Forest Stewardship Council certification and California Air Resources Board (CARB) II compliance. The sustainable boards can be used for green construction or manufacture of laminated furniture. Or, in the ideal closed-loop system, “boards made from wood waste generated in a retailer’s supply chain could be re-directed back for the manufacture of furniture marketed in their stores, as shelving in their warehouses or as display fixtures,” he adds.
Similarly, in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., an RPL facility provides closed-loop recycling by processing post-industrial, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) plastic and converting it into regrind material that can be reused in plastics manufacturing processes.
“Before the recession, there was an increasing emphasis on sustainability. Now, companies are looking at it as another way to reduce operating costs—and waste is a large expense,” he says. “We help identify items of value in a waste stream, or find ways to further maximize that value. And it’s good for the environment, too.”
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