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In 2010, As You Sow received the California Stewardship Bow and Arrow Award for Coalition Building, from the California Product Stewardship Council, for its engagement of the three largest U.S. beverage companies (the Coca Cola Company, PepsiCo, and Nestle Waters North America), leading each to commit to recycling a majority of their post-consumer containers over the following six years.
With its Refresh Project, Pepsi has used community grants to win brand loyalty from a new generation of buyers. With the expansion of charter schools and public/private partnerships, community ...
[13] [14] Greenopolis gave rewards points to users from 2008 to 2012 through social media websites, Facebook Games [15] [16] and bottle and can recycling via PepsiCo Dream Machines. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] The Dream Machines were placed on college campuses, [ 19 ] grocery stores and military bases [ 20 ] across the US and collected more than 4 million ...
In 2009, US$27.9 million was contributed through this foundation, including grants to the United Way [101] and YMCA, [102] among others. In 2009, PepsiCo launched an initiative called the Pepsi Refresh Project, For the first time in 23 years, PepsiCo did not invest in Super Bowl advertising for its iconic brand. Instead, the company diverted ...
The Pepsi Refresh Project (PRP) was a 2010 initiative by PepsiCo to award $20 million in grants to individuals, businesses and non-profits that promote a new idea that has a positive impact on their community, state, or the nation. The project is completely separate from the Pepsi Corporate Foundation and uses money budgeted for marketing. [1]
May 22—INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Department of Environmental Management has announced recipients of the agency's Community Recycling Grant Program. IDEM awarded $465,068 to 18 applicants.
Jul. 23—Governor Andy Beshear and Energy and Environment Cabinet Secretary Rebecca Goodman recently announced $6.5 million in grants to local governments, fiscal courts and universities for 76 ...
To convince lawmakers to adopt recycling policies, lobbyists argued that recycling would not take away jobs and would be paid for by taxes. [4] Curbside recycling programs became more widespread, and by 1992 there were over 4,000 such programs across the US. [4] Yet, these programs were not profitable and had to be subsidized with taxpayers ...