Farmers and grocers are thinking outside the box the waxlined box, that is. The produce industry which uses tons of the nonrecyclable paraffincoated cardboard boxes each year to ship fresh fruits and vegetables all over the world is weighing a greener, waxfree option. Thursday, lakeside organic gardens of watsonville shipped a small load of iceberg lettuce to new leaf community market in santa cruz using cardboard boxes lined with a sustainable alternative.
It was a test run to see if an unwaxed box could withstand the hefty cooling process involving ice and water that&39s required of lettuce and other vegetables. The effort was spearheaded by global green usa, a californiabased nonprofit that works to reduce waste and address global warming. "it&39s way way doable," said ceasar garcia, who oversees quality control for lakeside.
"we need to change something because we can&39t reuse the wax box." the agriculture industry has used a mix of cardboard boxes for nearly a decade, including waxlined and those made of recyclable materials. Growers regularly ship produce in plastic containers or wood pallets that can be reused. However, there are circumstances, roughly 5 percent of the time,
which demand the use of a waxcoated box because of its strength and ability to handle the ice and water needed to keep perishables fresh over long distances such as trips to the east coast. Industry leaders say even that small percentage adds up to nearly 1.5 million tons of boxes getting hauled off to landfills each year. Garcia of lakeside organic gardens said his company spends at least 250,000 each year on dumping nonrecyclable vegetable boxes in the landfill.
Sarah owens of new leaf community markets said the cardboard boxes fresh produce arrives in is one of the store&39s biggest sources of waste. Store officials wholeheartedly support the use of materials that can be reused or recycled. "it&39s great for the industry and it&39s great for the environment," owens said. "we would love to see more of this." annie white of global green said durability and cost are key factors to permanently dumping the waxcoated box.
The price of wax is always increasing," white said. "we think it can be done cost competitively. They&39ll see savings on the other end without having to go to the landfill. "we&39re still in the development stage. It&39s a nascent, emerging market for growers and grocers."