Dallas Zoo Aims to Keep Nitrile Gloves from Landfills

Through Kimberly-Clark’s RightCycle Program, the zoo is providing a renewable way to dispose of nitrile gloves.

Waste360 Staff, Staff

August 2, 2019

3 Min Read
nitrile gloves

For staffers at the Dallas Zoo, nitrile gloves from Kimberly-Clark Professional help ensure quality and safety when they care and feed for more than 2,000 animals. Through Kimberly-Clark’s RightCycle Program, the zoo also has expanded the overall impact of its sustainability efforts by providing a safe, renewable way to dispose of these gloves.

The RightCycle Program works with universities, research and manufacturing facilities, zoos and a variety of other businesses to take hard-to-recycle products, such as used gloves, protective apparel and safety eyewear, and convert them into new consumer goods. Dallas Zoo estimates it has been able to divert more than 1,000 pounds of gloves since starting the program in 2018—roughly the weight of one of its female giraffes.

“When these gloves go to a landfill, they can be consumed by wildlife or they can wind up in our oceans and harm marine life,” said Shannon College, a Dallas Zoo animal supervisor who runs the zoo’s Green Team, in a statement. “Our team members were really excited, and they immediately agreed to participate in the program. Anything we can do to reduce that impact is vitally important to us.”

Keeping plastic waste out of the environment is an integral part of the zoo’s commitment to create a better world for animals. That’s why the zoo partnered with the RightCycle Program to recycle the nitrile gloves that it uses for animal care, cleaning and food preparation.   

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“Kimberly-Clark has a long relationship with the Dallas Zoo through our support of numerous conservation efforts and, of course, making products to help keep the Dallas Zoo staff and animals healthy and safe. But the real pride for us is to partner with the zoo on a program that provides such a tangible contribution to their mission to create a better world for animals,” said Jennifer Shaffer, RightCycle Program manager for Kimberly-Clark Professional, in a statement.

For the Dallas Zoo, participating in the program isn’t just about recycling waste from its own facilities, it’s also about modeling responsible environmental practices to inspire others.

“We enjoy being able to show our guests various ways to change their behavior,” said College. “For example, a lot of our zoologists wear the gloves during animal encounters, and they say to guests, ‘This is one more way that that we’re creating a better world for animals. We wear these gloves, and we recycle them.’”

The program has been received by both zoo employees and visitors. In addition to telling visitors about the RightCycle Program, the zoo shows guests what happens to the gloves after they are recycled.

“We purchased plastic flowerpots to show how used gloves go to the RightCycle Program to be turned into plastic products like the ones guests see around the zoo, with plants that benefit local pollinators and herbs that we use as scent enrichment activities for our animals,” added College. “And our guests are super impressed. They don’t realize that glove recycling is an option. They appreciate the extra steps we take to make these changes and see us at the forefront of a program that is redirecting a large volume of waste in such a utilized way.”

The RightCycle Program is a large-scale recycling initiative in the scientific and industrial products industries for nonhazardous laboratory gloves, single-use apparel and safety eyewear. The used products are transformed into flowerpots, shelving, lawn and garden furniture and other goods by U.S. manufacturers. Since 2011, the program has helped zoos, aquariums, universities, research facilities and a range of businesses divert more than 830 tons of waste from landfills.

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