The Pizza Box Mystery

Many people assume that pizza boxes are recyclable. In fact, most boxes have recycling symbols on them and are traditionally made from corrugated cardboard. They are, in and of themselves, recyclable.

However, what makes parts of them non-recyclable is the hot, tasty treat that comes inside them, specifically, the grease and cheese from pizza that soil the cardboard.

So there you have it, pizza boxes that are tarnished with food, or any paper product that is stained with grease or food, are not recyclable – unless you remove the tainted portions.

But why is this? And what are the implications for the general, pizza-loving public? Mmm, pizza.

Find a Cardboard Recycling Solution Near You

Andiamo a mangiare...and recycle too! Photo: Recyclingweek.planetark.org

Andiamo a mangiare...and recycle too! Photo: Recyclingweek.planetark.org

How it Gets Recycled

Food is one of the worst contaminants in the paper recycling process. Grease and oil are not as big of a problem for plastic, metal and glass, as those materials are recycled using a heat process. But when paper products, like cardboard, are recycled, they are mixed with water and turned into a slurry. Since we all know water and oil don’t mix, the issue is clear.

Grease from pizza boxes causes oil to form at the top of the slurry, and paper fibers cannot separate from oils during the pulping process. Essentially, this contaminant causes the entire batch to be ruined. This is the reason that other food related items are non-recyclable (used paper plates, used napkins, used paper towels, etc).

“The oil gets in when you’re doing your process of making paper,” said Terry Gellenbeck, a solid waste administrative analyst for the City of Phoenix. “The oil causes great problems for the quality of the paper, especially the binding of the fibers. It puts in contaminants, so when they do squeeze the water out, it has spots and holes.”

But what about other things regularly found on paper products, like ink? “Most inks are not petroleum-based so they break down fast. Food is a big problem,” he said.

Also, be mindful of adhesives that may be on the pizza box (coupons, stickers, etc.) as those are contaminants. Known as “pressure sensitive adhesives (PSAs)” these can ruin the recycling process just as much as oil or food remains.

An Interesting Development: This City Found a Way to Recycle Pizza Boxes

Sneaks

Many people admit trying to “sneak” their pizza boxes in with cardboard boxes and such. In reality, this does more harm than good as the contaminated cardboard could ruin the whole recycling batch.

In fact, contamination in the recycling business is a big problem. Some estimates put the costs of irresponsible contamination in the neighborhood of $700 million per year industry-wide. Gellenbeck estimates that for the City of Phoenix, contamination costs them around $1 million annually, because of damage to machinery, disposal costs for the non-recyclable material and wasted time, materials and efficiency. With the City processing 129,000 tons of materials in 2008 (around 7 percent of this is cardboard), money is an important factor as to why residents should know what their municipalities do and do not accept.

A New Hope: Will This Reusable Pizza Box Catch On?

So, What Do I Do?

The easiest remedy for this problem is to cut or tear out the soiled portions of your pizza boxes and trash them. For example, you can tear the top of the box off, recycle that and throw away the bottom part containing the grease. If the entire box is grease-free, the whole box can be recycled with a guilt-free conscience.

Another option to recycling cardboard is to compost it, although the grease rule still applies here as well. “Even with oils, you shouldn’t compost [greased cardboard]. It causes rotting, you get more bugs and smell and it’s just not good for the plants,” said Gellenbeck.

Most importantly, being well-versed on what your local recyclers accept, can make the biggest difference. “It all depends on where your processor sends your paper, too,” said Gellenbeck, whose authority applies only to the City of Phoenix. “If you can keep a particular thing like the food out, the plastics out, all those things that really shouldn’t be there, it would help.”

Answer More Tough Questions: 10 Recycling Mysteries, Solved!

Bibliography: The Pizza Box Mystery
  1. Russ Wotton

    posted on June 23rd, 2011 at 12:51 pm

    Great article Lori. I just posted this on our Operation Clean Sweep Fan Page. Domino's Pizza has been a great supporter and we wanted to get the message out about Pizza boxes.
  2. Raina Gul

    posted on June 29th, 2011 at 2:04 pm

    This is very informative post and helps us a lot to increase our info. regarding this issue. Thanks for providing such nice and informative post here. Keep providing us such valuable posts in future as well. <a href="http://www.apnilist.com">Pakistan</a>
  3. Raina Gul

    posted on June 29th, 2011 at 2:05 pm

    This is very informative post and helps us a lot to increase our info. regarding this issue. Thanks for providing such nice and informative post here. Keep providing us such valuable posts in future as well. http://www.apnilist.com
  4. Mount Zip Rushmore

    posted on September 5th, 2011 at 5:27 am

    why do pizza box's smell like armpit from the store?
  5. Stephanie Barry

    posted on October 11th, 2011 at 6:05 pm

    Are Pizza Boxes Recyclable?
  6. David Crew

    posted on October 22nd, 2011 at 4:42 pm

    Hey Lori, I am visiting this site today because I.
  7. Mary Matarazzo

    posted on October 23rd, 2011 at 9:06 pm

    Can you recycle pizza boxes?
  8. Roger Levy

    posted on November 14th, 2011 at 4:31 pm

    yes but only parts that are clean
  9. Douglas Muth

    posted on November 14th, 2011 at 6:51 pm

    I have a better plan: don't eat pizza. :-P
  10. Teresa Sheahan

    posted on February 22nd, 2012 at 2:59 am

    thats crazy talk
  11. Sarah Rippy

    posted on December 22nd, 2011 at 6:09 pm

    Here in San Francisco, we can put pizza boxes in our compost bin, after we take out the plastic bit in the middle of the pizza.
  12. David Miller

    posted on January 10th, 2012 at 9:58 pm

    Same here in Kirkland, WA (Seattle area). Food-soiled paper of all sorts goes in the yard waste bin, along with the food waste and occasional bit of "yard waste" :)
  13. Valerie Loeb Retan

    posted on January 2nd, 2012 at 2:55 pm

    I always wondered why pizza boxes were recyclable, now I know!
  14. Sam Rabito III

    posted on January 16th, 2012 at 9:53 pm

    They should make a law that pizza boxes be made from recycled material only. This way the tree was harvested with another purpose instead of straight to the garbage. I wonder how many pizza boxes are used annually?
  15. Serious Crunchers

    posted on February 29th, 2012 at 5:20 am

    I work in the Recycle department of a major industry Locally, we recycle perhaps 30 tons of cardboard per month...perhaps I should get with m collector on these issues...what about the glue and plastics on the tapes?
  16. Kaley Crawford

    posted on March 1st, 2012 at 7:03 am

    yyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeaaaaaa
  17. Cindy Veltri

    posted on March 2nd, 2012 at 2:14 pm

    If the grease is such a problem for the recycling industry and not good for our gardens, just imagine what it is doing to our internal organs.
  18. Lori Testy

    posted on March 2nd, 2012 at 8:56 pm

    I never knew all this about a pizza box that most everyone would assume can be recycled. Thanks for the article.
  19. Lydia Lusk

    posted on March 4th, 2012 at 9:52 pm

    what about to go cups, with lids and straws. are they recycleable?
  20. Accent Hair Design, Huntersville, NC

    posted on March 4th, 2012 at 9:54 pm

    are to go cups with lids and straws, from fast food restaurants recycleable?
  21. Earth911

    posted on March 7th, 2012 at 12:12 am

    Unfortunately, they typically aren't!
  22. Robin Ann Quinn

    posted on April 21st, 2012 at 12:46 pm

    One of the first requirements I learned for recycling is: no food residue. First for the recycling process and second for the vermin issues.
  23. Matthew Lehmann

    posted on April 28th, 2012 at 12:27 am

    What Domino's Pizza Australia has to say.. it may be different in different parts of the world but they are saying that in Australia cheese and oil doesn't matter.. but crusts and toppings need to be removed. http://www.dominos.com.au/TheJourney/How/RecycledPizzaBoxes
  24. Kyriakos Christodoulou

    posted on April 29th, 2012 at 8:54 pm

    Piss off, if fairy liquid can disintegrate grease then I'm sure some detergent can remove it from the recycling process.
  25. Katrina Brown

    posted on April 29th, 2012 at 10:43 pm

    Something to remember.
  26. Kyla Gonzales

    posted on May 8th, 2012 at 2:09 am

    answers my question, and Theresa Gonzales' too! :-)
As of June 17th 2011 we have upgraded our comment system to use Facebook comments. The below comments are closed and are listed for historical purposes.

89 Archived Comments

  1. Laura

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 12:30 am

    Maybe we should develop a re-usable pizza “box” made of dish-washer safe plastic.

  2. Lisa

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 9:11 am

    It seems so simple, but I can’t count the times I’ve hemmed and hawed in front of the recycling bin with a pizza box. Great post!

  3. colleen r dawson

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 11:14 am

    I have a audiovox cell phone, when i purchased it ,no one told me it was used, i cant see the numbers the lights dont work and there is no color, i tried to exchange it or have it refurbished, now i am told the phone is absolete, and need to get a new one, is there anyone ,company out there that could fix my cell, i really like, it, or is it just a waste of time and money, should i just get a new one, colleen please answer
    dawsoncolleen@yahoo.com

  4. BeMoreEco » Pizza boxes are recyclable … right?

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 11:49 am

    [...] shouldn’t be sneaking your grease-soaked pizza box into the recycling bin, you were right. Earth911 lays it out in black and white: “Pizza boxes that are tarnished with food, or any paper [...]

  5. Richard

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 1:55 pm

    Very good article. I had no idea that the food in a pizza box could keep it from being reclcled.

  6. Kriten

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 5:02 pm

    I was shocked when I read this article! I had no idea that if there was any food or grease on them thae weren’t recyclable! Thanks for making me better informed.

  7. Bob

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 9:32 pm

    I thought this artice was great because I have been throwing my pizza boxes away in the recyling trash can for many years, but now I will be able to stop.. Thank you EARTH911

  8. Sangesh

    posted on March 2nd, 2009 at 11:27 pm

    Wow, this is an interesting fact. I knew that the pizza boxes were recyclable but didn’t know about the exception that if any food gets stuck in the box it does not get recycled at all.

  9. Dust from PAGE

    posted on March 3rd, 2009 at 3:29 pm

    The post is so true in my area I am trying to get the small pizza places to put a piece of wax paper or other insulator in so that the cardboard can be recycled. I know one they started using another piece of thin cardboard like a tray so that customers can take the pizza out and put it on the table. These things can prevent tainted cardboard.

  10. JAZMINE

    posted on March 3rd, 2009 at 4:19 pm

    wow!! and my mom owns a pizza plce so that will help ALOT!!!! = )

  11. Jazmine

    posted on March 3rd, 2009 at 4:20 pm

    yeah, ur right “dust from page”thats what pizza factory does.

  12. Cathy

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 10:50 am

    I’ve been laying the boxes face down on my garden paths. Originally I thought grass paths between my raised beds were pretty. But turns out to be very difficult upkeep. The boxes work well. I figure over time I’ll be able to dig out some great soil to add to the beds. (It is a little shocking how quickly I’m getting all the paths covered!)

  13. Tony

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 10:51 am

    Here in Morgan Hill, we encourage our residents to place pizza boxes and other food-soiled paper products in with their yard trimmings for curbside collection. It’s a process that works great and really cuts down on the volume of trash….especially for families with lots of teenagers. People living in other communities should let their recycling company know that they’d like this service added.

  14. Bobby

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:01 am

    We visit our local pizzeria at least once per week and the first dozen or so times the owner and workers looked at me kind of strange as I kept bringing back my “gently used” pizza box. We have been reusing our box for a number of years, and our goal is to use no more than 3 boxes during a 12 month period. In 2008, we cut that down to 2 boxes – of course the folks at the pizzeria are now enjoying the fun as well – we kept track and last year we had 41 pizzas! We had a little ceremony in early January when it was time to get a new box and start keeping track again. The key of course is that the pizza maker is “gentle” on the box and we clean it as soon as we get home and take the pizza out. If after all it’s use we can keep it clean, we do then recycle it with our cardboard.

  15. Julie

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:08 am

    thanks! i was looking at a pizza box the other day.. I hate throwing the WHOLE thing away!Great article!! I will pass the news along!

  16. Josh Gomez

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:25 am

    Maybe boxes should just be made out of pizza crust, then we can eat them!

  17. diana

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:28 am

    i make a solar cooker out of mine.

  18. Josh Gomez

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:29 am

    NomNomNom!

  19. Dave Benjamin

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:35 am

    Yes, and pizza delivery people should wear gloves made out of Parmesan.

  20. Jessica

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 11:47 am

    In response to a comment above, pizza boxes are usually not allowed to be picked up with yard trimmings and green waste. If you live in San Francisco and your waste hauler collects compost, then yes you can mix your pizza box with your green waste. If your city does not collect compost, I doubt they will collect your pizza boxes with the yard trimmings. But as the comment stated, check with your waste hauler.

    And thank you for posting this, I work in waste diversion and contamination is always an issue. Education is the one of the answers.

  21. Joe

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 1:01 pm

    Te truth is the disposable nature of the whole “call the pizza guy” process is what is flawed. I know most people don’t like to hear things like this, but the best solution is don’t buy the pizza in the first place. Think of the gas it takes to deliver just one meal. It’s more than what to do with the box. Walk to the restaurant and eat it there, or better yet, make you own.

  22. Laura lee

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 2:09 pm

    I like the idea of reusing your pizza boxes, like Bobby & family are doing. We live in a totaly dispossable world, I have adult kids and there out look is oh well i can go out and buy another, instead of being conciences of there surroundings

  23. Brad

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 2:15 pm

    I also like what “Dust from PAGE” says. I think some kind of insulator between the box and the pizza would be a good thing, but it would have to be either biodegradable or recyclable. The cardboard insert would be one option, but perhaps another option would be a (recyclable/durable) plastic insert that can be cleaned and returned to the pizza joint (for a pizza discount perhaps) or at the very least recycled. Trouble is, some people who are not up on their recycling might just throw it away with the box and this would add to the problem…

  24. Tania Levy

    posted on March 4th, 2009 at 4:48 pm

    City of Berkeley recycling program: good comment about effect of food contamination on recycling paper. But “stickies” are not a problem. The paper mills added technology many years ago to remove self-adhesive labels, tape, cellophane windows etc. as they assume these materials will be present. Otherwise, they could not accept post-consumer paper.

  25. Little Bit of Paper: The Importance of Recycling Paper « Recycle Raccoon’s Easy Going Green

    posted on March 5th, 2009 at 7:45 am

    [...] that cannot be recycled include any paper that has come into contact with wet or greasy food (i.e. pizza boxes or ice cream boxes) and wrapping paper.  Also, when you get those credit card offers, make sure to [...]

  26. Rick

    posted on March 6th, 2009 at 12:58 am

    This is not a consumer problem. It is a complaint by the recycling industry to avoid having to pay for an additional process to clean up what they bought or took for free. Consumers pay a hefty price for containers, advertising and seller’s profits in the total product cost and deserve safe, healthy food without accepting additional costs and burdens for container disposal. Why disposal costs are not part of a manufacturer’s responsibility, who design these containers, etc., is based on faulty property ownership laws and is nothing more than a sham. We buy the useable consumable product not the manufacturer’s distribution tool. This seems to me to be the recycling industry’s version of their “faith-based initiatives for profit.”

  27. Joel

    posted on March 6th, 2009 at 5:27 am

    wow… -I had no idea the seriousness of this. I just assumed that a process that dissolved the food-grease (like benzene, as~used in the dry-cleaning business) might be used. I guess that this would contaminate the paper pulp too.

    Great!

    -Joel

  28. The Pizza Box Mystery « SMFA Recycling

    posted on March 6th, 2009 at 9:44 am

    [...] The Pizza Box Mystery Posted by cjdombeck Filed in food, greeen, recycling Tagged: box, contaminated, Earth911, food, [...]

  29. Jenn

    posted on March 7th, 2009 at 7:19 am

    Another option is a “Take and Bake” pizza place like Papa Murphy’s. They usually put the pizza on a thin piece of cardboard or thick wax paper that goes in the oven. And they just wrap it in cellophane instead of putting in a box. Or like someone else said make your pizza. It’s healthier too!

  30. Patti

    posted on March 7th, 2009 at 11:21 pm

    Very useful information! I certainly understand why pizza boxes should not be recycled due to the grease contaminant. The article also mentions paper plates, towels, and napkins. I often toss those items in for recycling if they don’t have grease stains or if they were used only for drying my hands after washing them with soap and water. So is this acceptable, or should they not be recycled at all??

  31. Elizabliss

    posted on March 8th, 2009 at 12:53 am

    The grease wouldn’t be good for our own backyard composting, but what about earthworms? Can they handle the grease?

  32. Pizza Boxes: Are They Recyleable? « Green Living

    posted on March 9th, 2009 at 9:22 am

    [...] sort of. While reading the article  The Pizza Box Mystery, at Earth911.com, I found why parts of a pizza box, or any other paper product with left over food [...]

  33. Michelle

    posted on March 9th, 2009 at 9:58 am

    This is a great article! I’m trying to plan a project for our grade school for earth day (all of april). Each week will be something different to raise awareness or a service project. I think this will work great!
    Thanks! Michelle

  34. Hao

    posted on March 11th, 2009 at 11:33 am

    I agree with Bobby and Laura Lee, reuse, reuse, reuse. Apply this with plastic bags as well.

    Reduce , IMHO is the best method to a greener planet.

  35. Solver

    posted on March 13th, 2009 at 3:03 pm

    If everyone who reads this board would simply barf up the pizza you eat, and recycle that, we could probably get rid of at least one landfill within a week. Within a month, the loss of that many needless airbreathers would allow us to close many more. Good grief, you people are so concerned about waste! What about time wasted? The amount you spend trying to feel better about yourselves while getting constipated staring at your big blue bin could be put to better use saving the economy! If so much of your stuff is getting recycled anyway, why does the damn recycled stuff still cost too much? I wonder how much problem all of our dirty diapers are causing in the recycled paper? Cut the damn trees down – they’ll grow back faster than you all will get back to useful work.

  36. eric wood

    posted on March 14th, 2009 at 10:42 am

    In my pre-diabetes days, my kitchen was full of pizza and related produces and I blissfully tossed the empty boxes in the recycling. Thanks for the heads up. While my local pizza delivery guy has been having withdrawal symptoms from not being at my door for over a month, I will change my ways the next time I order.

    Would be nice if the boxes were reusable.

    http://www.goinggreenaccidently.blogspot.com

  37. bill

    posted on March 14th, 2009 at 9:38 pm

    If the food and grease from the pizza are not recyclable. Then imagine consuming that in to your body. I love pizza as much as the next, but never knew the bi-product from it could damage or ruin an whole batch of recyclable cardboard.

  38. To recycle pizza boxes « Vision

    posted on March 16th, 2009 at 4:31 pm

    [...] The Pizza box mystery, Earth911 [...]

  39. Glen

    posted on March 24th, 2009 at 11:17 pm

    Food is a major problem with recycling although it is not commonly known. Good article and useful information for the general consumer to have.

  40. Lori Brown

    Lori Brown

    posted on April 8th, 2009 at 3:03 pm

    A viewer recently sent us this great website that makes reusable and recyclable pizza boxes called the Hybrid Pizza Box. Might be worth a look!

  41. REDUCE, REUSE, AND RECYCLE the pizza box of the future « The Conservation Report

    posted on May 8th, 2009 at 10:39 pm

    [...] composting greasy pizza boxes: Another option to recycling cardboard is to compost it, although the grease rule still applies [...]

  42. Todd Rubenack

    posted on May 26th, 2009 at 12:52 pm

    Great article! I wanted to inform everyone of an emerging alternative to the pizza box that is not mentioned. I am a partner in Flat Pak Packaging, Inc and we offer the patented Flat Pak Pizza System that consists of a plastic bag and tray. It is a truly green solution to the pizza box as the bag is 100% recyclable with biodegradable componets and the tray is 100% compostable, made entirely from plant fibers so that NO TREES are used in its construction whatsoever! Pizza Hut reconfigured pizza boxes to save 275,000 trees a year in 1992. Imagine if we could eliminate corrugated from pizza COMPETELY how many trees we could save! Pricewise, the Flat Pak Pizza System is typically CHEAPER than the corrugated pizza box. Our website is currently being updated, but please visit when you have the chance. Feel free to e-mail me with any questions you may have. Thanks!!

  43. Sri Julianti

    posted on June 29th, 2009 at 12:02 am

    Great articles. I think Pizza producer to provide the box with perforation, so that the consumer can trim the box easily.

  44. Think Twice About That Pizza Box | Earth Promise

    posted on July 2nd, 2009 at 5:48 am

    [...] becomes unrecyclable, but the other paper that sits with it waiting to be recycled becomes ruined. Earth911 has a great post detailing the pizza box [...]

  45. What sort of paper can be recycled? : Blisstree - Family, Health, Home and Lifestyles

    posted on July 28th, 2009 at 10:16 pm

    [...] pizza box, according to Earth 911 is not only not recyclable in most cases but may be contributing to a $700 [...]

  46. Blogs » Blog Archive » thinking outside the (cardboard pizza) box :: Blogs :: PostStar.com

    posted on August 5th, 2009 at 9:44 am

    [...] then ponder 500 cardboard boxes, which can’t be composted because of the oily food residue, and which most localities will not accept for recycling for the same reason. Pizza boxes will eventually decompose, if they make it to a landfill and not an incinerator, but [...]

  47. Holly

    posted on August 9th, 2009 at 1:10 am

    Thanks Lori! I love it any day that I learn something new and I, also, have stood at the recycler wondering yea or neigh…and then figured the food tainted it. I HAVE cut the bad part out and put the rest of the box into the bin, so now I feel good about that! I will begin to remove the pizza when it comes home and before it gets soiled with grease.

  48. bernard b carman

    posted on August 26th, 2009 at 10:13 am

    i generally inspect used pizza boxes prior to throwing them into my recycling and make a call. if they are not that bad, i put them outside face up to get rained on an cleaned. usually, that takes care of the problem, as far as i can tell.

    but regarding the cost of recycling, i have been under the presumption, based on various studies in the past, that most recycling doesn’t work very well anyway. from what i understand, ONLY aluminum is worth recycling via the current process and most all other forms (glass, paper, plastic) operate in the negative cost, and the processes used are actually bad for the environment (sort of like “green cars” having expensive batteries which need to be replaced every few years and are bad for the environment). ALSO, that much of the recycled material actually just winds up in the land fills.

    i’ve just been going along with it for years living in a house with 9 people, but feeling like i’m not really helping in doing so, and merely just “following the law”. is this still true, or is there some new and improved recycling method that actually works well? i would not be surprised in the least, for nearly everything the government becomes involved in doesn’t work! 8-)

  49. B Raymond

    posted on September 4th, 2009 at 5:57 am

    In our part of Washington State, our yard waste collection company–Waste Management, Inc.–happily accepts food waste in with the yard waste. All of that is taken (a short distance) to a private composting facility. This includes soiled pizza boxes and and food soiled paper.

  50. Pam K.

    posted on November 11th, 2009 at 2:39 pm

    A SMALL amount of grease or cooked food residue shouldn’t be a problem if you are making your own compost (assuming there is enough “clean” compost to mix with). Extrapolating on the garden path idea–another use for the “dirty” part of the pizza box (or other cardboard) is as a weed barrier when creating raised beds or underneath decorative mulch. It will decompose eventually and add to the soil. If at the bottom of a raised bed it will discourage weed seeds from sprouting but allow roots from plantings to penetrate to the soil below.
    By the way–I love the idea of reuseing “gently used” pizza boxes for those who eat takeout pizza regularly–not the solution for everyone but still….cool!

  51. Gabe

    posted on November 16th, 2009 at 9:01 pm

    I am actually quite upset. I’m glad that I finally learned this, as I can’t count the number of times that I’ve recycled greased pizza boxes. I think instead of calling it “irresponsible recycling” perhaps it should be “not raising awareness.” I’m astounded that I haven’t learned this before, and I think it’s because of poor education on the matter, which should be corrected. If it really wastes $700 million per year, I think the best remedy to the problem is actually let the public know, not sit back and eat the deficits.

  52. Becky

    posted on November 19th, 2009 at 2:00 pm

    Great post!! I always tell my roommates we can recycle pizza boxes and used napkins, whoops!

  53. DrT_WholeChiro

    posted on December 26th, 2009 at 7:31 am

    Wonderful article and a lot of great followup comments! I think many hit the nail on the head by saying this is an “awareness issue” or “lack of education”. Being a doctor that tries to be ecoconscious at my office, using “green” energy, etc., I was surprised to learn that the occasional pizza box (guilty pleasure) that we had been “recycling” was actually harming the process. Not that I’m the smartest tack in the box, but if a doctor doesn’t know @ this, how is the average American consumer going to know or even care? I think if we use this positive knowledge and spend the energy to spread awareness within our families, friends, offices, neighborhoods, we might be able to make a difference in a larger way.
    However, I also agree with some of the above people (perhaps Lori could revisit the original article and sum up the best of the above comments?):
    1. REDUCE: eat at the restaurant; don’t take out/have delivered; make yourself; avoid unhealthy food in the first place!
    2. REUSE: recyclable plastic pizza boxes; use paper/plastic grease barriers; wash your boxes (sorry, but, blech!); increase composting programs in cities
    3. RECYCLE: perhaps this _should_ be something the paper recycling manufacturers should worry about, not the consumers? since the average consumer is bearing the cost of the box & is apparently not knowledgeable in the first place about recycling in general?

  54. Lori Brown

    Lori Brown

    posted on December 28th, 2009 at 4:21 pm

    Hi DrT_WholeChiro,
    Your suggestion to revisit the original article and sum up some of the above comments is a great one! We’ll look into an update of this article in the future. Thank you.
    Lori Brown
    Earth911

  55. Mickie

    posted on December 30th, 2009 at 3:50 pm

    In Seattle and the Burbs, pizza boxes are composted, along with paper towels and paper napkins. They go into the yard waste bin, which is picked up once a week and then taken to a composting facility.

  56. KA

    posted on January 6th, 2010 at 9:49 am

    The same logic applies to donut boxes, fried chicken buckets, and fastfood takeout bags or burger boxes.

  57. Chris

    posted on January 25th, 2010 at 8:19 am

    Reusing the box is a great idea. I do this whenever I get a beverage carrier from a fast food place. The thought of throwing it out or even recycling it when it is perfectly fine bugs me. A note about the pizza boxes: check your local Board of Health regulations. In my state, you cannot bring back a used pizza box as it is supposedly a health hazard. You’re not supposed to be able to reuse a paper bag, etc. It’s crazy but that’s our state.

  58. BReeve

    posted on March 23rd, 2010 at 5:21 pm

    I contacted Papa John’s about clarifying the recycling symbols & “Corrugated Recycles” stamps on their pizza boxes and forwarded them this article. Has anyone else contacted any pizza places??
    “Fight the good fight & interrupt the main stream, even a dead fish can just ‘go with the flow’.”

  59. Tony

    posted on April 5th, 2010 at 2:30 am

    Hi Lori,
    my name is Tony and i am the owner of a pizzeria located in the heart of a college town. Needless to say about 90% of my costumers are college students, over the years i got used to a lot of their irresponsible behavior but some of them i just can’t get used to, here’s what happens, when they order slices or a whole pizza we ask them “for here or to go?” they say to go and after we put it in the to go pizza box they walk a few feet sit down and eat it at the table. Needless to say the box gets grease all over it and it becomes non reusable and non recyclable. That is so not necessary and wasteful considering that it happens 8 out of 10 times. A lot of times i still give it to them to stay even if they tell me to go, but they won’t take it until i put it in a box. It is so frustrating, especially when you think that they are college students and they should know better. Do you have any suggestions on how to solve the problem?

  60. Brandy

    posted on April 8th, 2010 at 3:50 pm

    Great article. I didn’t know that, thanks! (I’m going to have to share w/my roommates; we always eat pizza!)

    Hi Tony,

    I was just reading your post, and I think I know why they’re doing doing that. Sometimes when I eat out, if I don’t know how much time I have to eat my food, or if I will have left-overs when I’m finished, I just ask for it “to-go” so that I have the option to take it with me. (If I do end up eating it all, I throw the container away when I’m done.) What you might try doing is offering (or having available on the side) a “to-go” box, for the left-overs. That way if they do eat nearby, and if they have to leave, or they have left-overs, the can just conveniently grab the box/container and be on their way. Having this convenience might make them more willing to have it served “for here” since it’s easy to switch over. If they do finish eating all the pizza in-house, and don’t grab a box, no harm done. If they do grab a box, and don’t use it, at least it’s still clean and recyclable.

    Just a thought, even though I don’t know anything owning about a pizzeria, lol.

    Hope that helps :)

  61. elaine

    posted on April 14th, 2010 at 12:27 pm

    Wouldn’t it be a simple ‘fix’ to require all pizza companies to put a removable lining in each pizza box that wouldn’t transfer the grease to the cardboard in the first place? That would allow the whole entire box to be recycled! Also, require removable labels, etc. to be made of recycleable paper, and easy to remove from the box, so whether they are used or not, they would not hinder the recycling process! I’m sure that the pizza-box manufacturers could figure something out! This seems like a huge problem that could be remedied by some sort of a fairly simple fix! People who can deal with such things: Get your brains in gear, and DO SOMETHING ABOUT THIS !!!

  62. Greg Bartley

    posted on April 30th, 2010 at 5:39 pm

    Lori, thanks for a great article, though my wife won the bet on not being able to recycle the pizza box in which we just consumed the contents. I like the thought on some sort of a top/bottom liner for the pizza box…something biodegradable in a few years. Again, well written and informative.

  63. Joanna

    posted on June 1st, 2010 at 6:05 am

    Our local pizzeria doesn’t use a cardboard box to put pizza in. They use a paper bag with a small round plastic table in the center of the pizza so they can stack the pizza’s. While the bag would still be greesy and not recyclable, it would be less waste than an entire cardboard box.

  64. Daren

    posted on July 4th, 2010 at 7:38 pm

    Thanks for the information concurring the possibility of recycling pizza boxes. It helped a lot.

  65. Brian

    posted on August 4th, 2010 at 3:36 pm

    Seems to be an easy fix. Require all companies that use pizza boxes to put a plastic liner in the box that prevents oil from leaking into the cardboard. Design the liner so that can withstand the delivery process, but is easy to remove for recycling. I would imagine, once washed, both the plastic liner and the pizza box could then be recycled.

    Voila.

  66. Alvin

    posted on February 23rd, 2011 at 1:53 pm

    My county emphasizes curbside composting of pizza boxes and other paperware. Heck, they even air TV ads.. but recycling’s always been a big nono.

  67. Keith

    posted on February 26th, 2011 at 5:13 am

    The easiest fix I have come up with is to just shred mine in my shredder and add it to the compost pile. That avoids the whole problem and the food left on it (once it dries) shreds just fine and actually helps the compost. This would even work if you have one of the smaller kitchen composters I would think.

  68. Mr.Marcus

    posted on March 15th, 2011 at 5:40 pm

    How about having box manufacturers add a removeable, biodegradable liner on the inside?

  69. SW&R Office, Lowell, MA

    posted on March 16th, 2011 at 12:50 pm

    I wanted to share a website the Lowell (Mass) Green Team put together: http://www.recyclemypizzabox.net. The website describes the very simple steps to prepare your carboard pizza box for recycling. I will suggest they add a component related to composting of the soiled portion.

  70. Raz

    posted on April 5th, 2011 at 5:53 am

    Simple solution: Levy taxes on the pizza cardboard suppliers, they in turn increase rates on pizza companies, who will pass on the increase to the customer as a surcharge -> voila….less pizza is consumed, less ‘non-recyclable’ pizza boxes to worry about.

    Find a ‘greener’ route to a heart attack.

    Raz

  71. James

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 12:39 pm

    When my wife first told me that you can’t recycle Pizza boxes, I didn’t believe her. Guess she was right, and now I know why.
    Great article, thanks!

  72. Nicolas

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 1:19 pm

    Isn’t it not worth the energy to recycle anything anything but metals? To recycle things like cardboard requires a large amount of energy usually derived from burning fossil fuels. It’s better to let these things just biodegrade.

  73. Assman

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 1:34 pm

    Eat the cardboard and recycle the pizza. Just to stick it to those namby-pamby greenie recycling weenies.

  74. Mons Pubis

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 1:39 pm

    it’s cool, I make it a point not to recycle just to offset you indoctrinated eco-fascists.

  75. Bob

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 2:40 pm

    The stupidity of the recycling game is that it is generally assumed that the only path is to recycle that which has already been made. That the products that are already in production *have* to be left in production and recycling added to the system later down the line. This is soooooooo fcking stupid.

    Common sense tells us that the fix is not to keep making tons of crap and then trying to recycle it, but instead to (1) stop making tons of crap and (2) stop assuming that recycling is an additive measure to reduce the already manufactured tons of crap (which then get “recycled” into more crap).

    So, the only long term answers to the eternal question of dealing with recycling are:

    1. Stop making tons of crap.
    2. Manufacture the crap that does warrant manufacturing using materials that are renewable and capable of being separated and recycled.

  76. Jared Lorz

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 2:44 pm

    Recycling is for schmucks and idiots who like washing garbage. Stop washing your garbage and start just throwing it away.

  77. Peter

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 2:45 pm

    Seems the recycling facilities could handle the difficult grease problem with…SOAP! Does a great job of emulsifying fats.

  78. James

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 4:01 pm

    Great informative post. I’ll have to pass it along to my cube mate who thinks it’s a good idea to keep all of his used personal sized pizza boxes at his desk because he’s “going to recycle them”. I’ll let him know the dream is over, thanks!

  79. Speaker-to-Animals

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 6:35 pm

    Pizza boxes may not be recyclable, but they *are* compostable. The waste management program has “green” collection of compostables which include any soiled paper. It’s a far better alternative than landfill.

  80. Speaker-to-Animals

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 6:36 pm

    (I meant to say, the waste management program in the region I live in has this.)

  81. Endame

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 7:09 pm

    Maybe someone should write this on the recyclables containers because I’ve never heard such a thing and have certainly thrown away the occasional pizza box in the recyclables can from time to time.

  82. sin

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 7:16 pm

    I am wondering why people do not have these as alternative solution?

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQBjJjpkjl0

  83. Marilyn

    posted on April 18th, 2011 at 9:14 pm

    The recycling companies should create some cardboard sorting jobs, instead of throwing all that money away.

  84. Dave

    posted on April 19th, 2011 at 2:07 am

    I put them in my worm farm. Composting worms don’t mind a small amount of grease in their diet.

  85. Necromas

    posted on April 19th, 2011 at 7:20 am

    Recycling just doesn’t seem efficient yet for paper products, partly because of shit like this, and partly just because of all the other costs involved. IIRC without the government funding it is still more expensive and lower quality to make recycled paper products than fresh ones. And paper is a renewable resource that bio-degrades practically instantly. It just seems silly that we’re losing money (the most important resource) just because of some notion that recycling is inherently the better option.

    Ultimately it’s not about saving trees, it’s about saving resources, and until recycled products can be cheaper than the originals (which would be the case if there was a problem getting more wood to use), there’s no economic reason to do it.

  86. Jane Leisure

    posted on April 19th, 2011 at 7:34 am

    Hello Lori:

    I work for ABS Materials Inc (www.absmaterials.com). We make a material called Osorb, which could very easily clean the oils out of pizza boxes and other food contaminated items. Using Osorb to clean the contaminated batches could save all people involved a lot of time and money. If you are interested in learning more about what we do, feel free to contact me.

    Best,
    Jane

  87. Mike

    posted on May 1st, 2011 at 2:18 pm

    WAIT!
    Check with your local recycler before you start throwing pizza boxes in the trash!
    In Monroe County, NY, pizza boxes ARE accepted for recycling (and have been for a few years):
    http://www.monroecounty.gov/des-residentialrecycling.php
    I’m not saying the information about soiled cardboard is untrue. Monroe County may have a separate process to recycle them; they may compost them; or, they may have found a company that has another use for them. Either way, there’s a reason they’re not being sent straight to a landfill.

  88. Julie

    posted on May 19th, 2011 at 8:25 am

    Organics for compost is becoming much more widespread, and the pizza boxes and wax paper are both accepted in commercial compost programs–not backyard systems. Contact your community and start to inquire about organics collection–eventually with enough calls they will get a system going . . . our community has!

  89. Howard

    posted on May 30th, 2011 at 8:38 am

    I also would like to add that grease from hamburger wrappers (some fast food places like Five Guys use a paper wrapper rather than a box) makes the paper non-recyclable. The government should immediately institute an oversight process whereby separate receptacle containers are located at every fast-food restaurant in the nation. In this manner, customers can throw their grease-contaminant waste in one, and regular non-grease waste in the other. This will enable us to recycle correctly and to help to save the whales, and the polar bear, and the planet. Fast food establishments found in violation of the grease-separation law should not be allowed to apply for Obama-care waivers.

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