Pizza Pizza offers free slices in exchange for e-waste - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 01:12 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Science

Pizza Pizza offers free slices in exchange for e-waste

You can get a free slice of pizza this month when you turn in an old camera, cellphone or MP3 player for recycling.

Restaurants will accept cameras, cellphones and MP3 players for recycling in April

In April, anyone who brings in a small electronic device that they want to get rid of to a Pizza Pizza restaurant in Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Nova Scotia will get a free cheese or pepperoni slice (CBC)

You can get a free slice of pizza this month when you turn in an old camera, cellphone or MP3 player for recycling.

Pizza Pizza is once again launching its Slices for Devices campaign in April, which isEarth Month. Anyone who brings in a small electronic device that they want to get rid of to a Pizza Pizza restaurant in Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Nova Scotia will get a free cheese or pepperoni slice, the company announced Thursday.

For the second year, the company is also accepting bulk electronic waste or e-waste from schools and businesses. That includes larger items such computers and screens. In exchange, Pizza Pizza will provide a gift card toward a pizza lunch or party.

The e-waste collected will be recycled and refurbished with the help of the Electronic Products Recycling Association and Ontario Electronic Stewardship. Proceeds from refurbished products will be donated to the Children's Miracle Network, Pizza Pizza says.

E-waste is typically not accepted by landfills, as it often contains toxic metals. In many cities, e-waste can be dropped off at specific locations, including some stores, or at special waste collection events on specific dates. But that's not necessarily convenient.

E-waste is collected for recycling at the entrance of Prague Zoo in 2012. Electronic devices typically can't be dumped in the trash because they contain toxic metals. (Petr Josek/Reuters)

According to Statistics Canada's 2011Households and the Environment Survey, about 46 per cent of households had stockpiled e-waste to dispose of at the time of the survey.

The survey showed that on average about three to seven per cent of electronics were put in the garbage, although the percentage was much higher in some provinces. In New Brunswick, for example, 20 per cent of households put old computers in the garbage, and 15 per cent of households put old TV and computer displays in the trash.

Pizza Pizza says that since it first launched Slices for Devices in 2004, the program has collected nearly 17,000 devices.