
DO YOU KNOW HOW LONG
the waste life lasts once you lose sight of it?
Let's stop pretending that once we throw rubbish to the dustbin it magically disappears. Unfortunately, each time we purchase certain products we are deciding also how long the environment will have to deal with them. If in the times when the Holy Roman Empire was formed, plastic bags had been used as they are nowadays, we would be still finding them in our lawns

25 0000
WASTE
New, more complex packagings, are produced and released, in a daily basis, to the market. This is done to make our lives easier, for the sake of marketing or safety concerns. The average supermarket sells 25 000 products, which after being used end up only in a small percentage being recycled.


WHAT CAN BE DONE?
How much time do you spend in a typical month solving the riddle of which waste goes to which dustbin? To us, it takes above an hour monthly. One hour monthly deciding what to do with waste!!!
Our waste ends up in the woods, lakes seas and oceans
In Poland only
12 160 000 tons, of waste are produced yearly. If a wall was made of it, it would be 3 meters high, 1 meter thick and it would encircle the whole planet.


We have a common goal, ZERO waste
The modern economy should be based on transparency and on systems that make life easier, that help people, not systems that punish them.
THE CURRENT
SEGREGATION
SYSTEMS
are too complicated
Not all countries are at the same development level and recycling capabilities. It is enough with an adequate segregation to be able to recycle properly. A bad segregation and improper product selection imply that we are stealing from each other our rights to clean woods, water and air.
What do we want to solve?
Thanks to a segregation carried out at home it is possible to increase both quality and effectiveness of waste recycling without incurring the costs of expensive technological solutions which would also consume energy and water.

NOW SEE HOW THE CLEAR CYCLE SYSTEM WORKS
A concrete letter is assigned to each different material

Each waste bin has a concrete letter assigned according to the kind of material which should be discarded in it. Your role is only to match the marking on the product and the basket - without a deep analysis of what the product is made of.

You eat a candy bar and you are left with a wrapper. After that you effortlessly decide in which wastebin to discarde it.
The manufacturer makes a product composed of materials which receive the marks A, D and E. Each material can be thus easily identified by the user. For the user, it is easy to properly segregate the product components by identifying the letters A D E in those components and discard them in the appropriate wastebin A D or E.

If the products have their own marks, you don't need to keep all the containers at home, you only need two containers, and you split everything up before tossing it into the container.

