This disclosure pertains to a system and method for manufacturing and tracking materials management bags, and more particularly, to a system and method for manufacturing, individually coding and tracking materials management bags in association with one or more of a common entity (“generator”) and/or geographic location.
According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency, 42% of all greenhouse gasses (GHGs)—the emissions driving global climate change—are related to materials management. GHG reduction goals, including through waste diversion, have become an. integral part of governmental and corporate climate change reduction efforts.
Municipal governments and corporations have been working to reduce waste over the past several decades with limited success. There are state and local goals, mandatory recycling laws, as well as waste bans that forbid the disposal of certain materials, but there is no practicable way to monitor compliance or enforce these laws. Thus, there is a need for solutions that assist in reducing waste and ensuring compliance with existing and future laws related to recycling and waste management while maximizing the value governments, corporations and non-profit entities receive for materials recovered via recycling and reuse.
Recycling and reuse industry growth relies on the existence of clean and steady material feedstock streams. Recycling and material recovery programs have plateaued, however, and, at the same time existing streams of material have become more contaminated. The high and increasing levels of contamination in these programs have created costly obstacles for recyclers and recycling-related entities. These costs are passed on to taxpayers or consumers but are avoidable with the additional materials oversight, insight, and intelligence enabled by this invention.
To address these costs, some propose extended producer responsibility (EPR) policies that apply a tax on manufacturers to pay for the cost of recycling their material. EPR alone will not significantly reduce trash generation or increase materials recovery, quality or value.
There are thousands of materials management programs in the United States that currently require the use of special bags, including Pay As You Throw (PAYT) trash disposal programs, recycling programs, food waste collection programs, standard municipal bag programs, and others. The number of these programs continue to increase each year.
Education programs on their own have not and will not be enough to meet recycling goals. Indeed, education programs have been in place for decades and yet we still experience the growing problem of contamination in recycling, compost and other materials diversion programs. It is generally understood that approximately 10% of people recycle extremely well, 10% of people don't recycle at all, and 80% of people recycle sometimes. This 80% often has a general understanding of recycling and diversion program guidelines, but program education and enforcement for these 80% of residents is costly. Associated expenses are often cost-prohibitive. When it is done, enforcement typically consists of a person walking up and down the street looking in trash, recycling and compost bins for non-compliant items, and then attaching a piece of literature to a cart and hoping a resident pays attention to it. This ineffective system is not scalable to meet the extent of the challenge, and it is not sustainable long-terra.
A better understanding of specific entity (“generator”) behaviors would benefit from a tool that can provide regular information about generation as well as targeted intervention to specific generators. This is a critical next step to advance diversion efforts and reduce GHG emissions. Automation in scanning and imaging—including the ability to see into a materials management bag and even determine the chemical composition of its contents—would be coupled with artificial intelligence techniques: at recycling facilities to .determine what is in a bag. Knowledge of the contents of these bags together with the identities of the associated generators could enable waste and recycling professionals, at scale and low cost, to effectively educate, incentivize, or penalize generators based on their specific existing recycling behaviors.
By way of example, aspects of the present disclosure are directed to system and method for manufacturing and tracking materials management bags.
In accordance with aspects of the present disclosure, a bag tracking tool enables a series of uniquely coded material management bags with codes that are linked to specific entities (“generators”) to be tracked to improve recycling and material management, and make diversion program enforcement and education programs more cost effective and manageable. Generators within a specific program are required to use unique bags with codes for trash, recycling, compost, or other specified materials. The bags with codes are linked to a generator by those codes, and can be inspected in order to assist materials management program managers by providing information related to a specific generator's waste management behavior, including but not limited to weight, composition of materials, and program compliance. The tracking tool may facilitate a hands-free automatic communication channel directly to generators through mail, email or mobile system notification mechanisms; and provide detailed reports on individual and group behavior and trends so that program managers can maximize efficiency and success.
In accordance with additional aspects of the present disclosure, bag roll is disclosed for use in the material management program. The disclosed bag roll may include a plurality of bags formed from a flattened plastic film in continuous sequence and wound to form the bag roll. Each. bag in the bag roll has at least one instance of an identifying code that is unique to that bag, and at least one instance of the identifying code is located at a position on each bag roll so that at least one identifying code of an outermost bag is visible on the bag roll.
In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a bag is disclosed for inclusion in the bag roll, in which a plurality of instances of the identifying code are positioned along a fold line of the bag.
In accordance with other aspects of the disclosure, the identifying codes are presented as barcodes, matrix barcodes, QR codes, or chip codes, and represent numbers or alphanumeric strings that are either arranged in a sequence matching the sequence of the plurality of bags in the bag roll or are randomly assigned.
In accordance with further aspects of the disclosure, a method of making the bag roll is disclosed, including the steps of: a) forming a continuous sequence of bags for the bag roll from a flattened plastic film, b) communicating with a computer-based tool to obtain a plurality of unique identifying codes, each unique identifying code being associated with a respective one of the bags in the continuous sequence of bags, c) printing or affixing at least one instance of each identifying code to its respective bag, d) forming the bag roll from the continuous sequence of bags, e) scanning the unique identifying code of an outermost bag in the sequence of bags for the bag roll, and f) communicating the unique identifying code for the outermost bag to the computer-based tool. Once communicated, whereby the computer-based tool is operative to associate each of the plurality of unique identifying codes for all bags on a roll with the identifying code for the outermost bag.
In accordance with another aspect of the disclosure, the method includes the additional steps of: g) applying a wrapper to maintain the plurality of bags in the bag roll, h) placing the bag roll in a master packing case including at least on.e more bag roll that has a unique identifying code for a respective outermost bag, and i) communicating with the computer-based tool to provide the unique identifying codes for the outermost bags of the two or more bag rolls and obtain a master packing case code for the master packing case. The computer-based tool is then operative to associate the unique identifying codes for the outermost bags of the bag rolls (and, thereby, the identifying codes for the other bags in the bag rolls) with the master packing case code.
This SUMMARY is provided to briefly identify some aspects of the present disclosure that are further described below in the DESCRIPTION. This SUMMARY is not intended to identify key or essential features of the present disclosure, nor is it intended to limit the scope of any claims.
A more complete understanding of the present disclosure may be realized by reference to the accompanying drawing in which:
The following merely illustrates the principles of the disclosure. It will thus be appreciated that those skilled in the art will be able to devise various arrangements which, although not explicitly described or shown herein, embody the principles of the disclosure and are included within its spirit and scope.
Furthermore, all examples and conditional language recited herein are principally intended expressly to be only for pedagogical purposes to aid the reader in understanding the principles of the disclosure and the concepts contributed by the inventor(s) to furthering the art, and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions.
Moreover, all statements herein reciting principles, aspects, and embodiments of the disclosure, as well as specific examples thereof, are intended to encompass both structural and functional equivalents thereof. Additionally, it is intended that such equivalents include both currently known equivalents as well as equivalents developed in the future, i.e., any elements later developed that perform the same function, regardless of structure.
Unless otherwise explicitly specified herein, the drawings are not drawn to scale.
Aspects of the present disclosure are directed to system and method for manufacturing and tracking materials management bags,
Within the present disclosure, the following terms are used and defined as follows:
In accordance with aspects of the present disclosure, an exemplary system for manufacturing and tracking materials management bags is depicted in
Code Generation 101: The generation of a database of unique codes that are pre-grouped, either sequentially or randomly, and which are associated together with other bags on a bag roll which themselves are linked to each other and are represented by outer bag code 110.
Bag Production 102: The production of bags on rolls. Each bag within a roil contains a different unique code to be linked with its outer bag code 110, which is preferably printed or otherwise attached in specific locations on each bag. The outer bag code 110 will be associated with and represent all bag codes 112 on the roll and therefore will represent a different number of bags based on the number of bags on a roll. The codes are attached in locations convenient for use by the facility, program managers, generators and others, with one or more codes located so that they are visible on the outer bag on a roll. The codes are attached, for example as illustrated in
Bag Distribution and Generator Identification 103, 200; The coded bags are provided to and linked to a generator, and are used by the generator to hold waste, recycling, organic and other materials. Generators may obtain bags for example through municipal distribution programs (voucher, mailing or municipal delivery) such as in Columbia Mo.; through designated retailers or municipal offices as in pay as you throw (“PAYT”) programs in municipalities like Worcester, Mass.; through vending systems; via online sales and/or distribution; from a waste reduction or hauling company; or through other program managers. The addresses or identities 200 of the Generators may be acquired either through these distribution systems, or through generator self identification through online, mobile application, in person, third party assistance or other means. Once acquired, the generator identity is then connected by bag tracking tool 100 to a specific outer bag code 110 which in turn links to all codes 112 within the roll of bags and to the master packing case code 113 for the case that contains the bag roll. This allows problems with an individual bag, for example, to be traced to a store or other entity that distributed the bag to the generator in order to address any distribution problems. As an example, in a municipal bag mailing, the outer bag code 110 would be activated or scanned and then connected with a specific generator address prior to being mailed. In a multifamily program or commercial entity, the code on the case of bags 113 could for example be scanned and associated with an apartment complex or management company, or broken down further to be linked to an individual apartment within a building, allowing the associated generator (the multifamily property) to be known without scanning the outer bag code 110 on each roll of bags.
Generator Disposal and Collection 104 : Bags are filled by the generator with recycling, compost, or other materials. The Bags are placed out for collection, either loose or in carts, barrels, dumpsters, or similar storage devices, where they are picked up by a truck along with other bags and materials. Bags may be collected through automated, semi-automated or manual collection. The collection protocol for program managers may vary and provide additional mechanisms or ways to capture and link generator identities 201 to a code 112 and/or verify program compliance 201. During collection, the collection worker, collection vehicle or others can for example obtain and link generator identification 200 by identifying the Code and geolocating the address via GPS, codes on carts, barrels, dumpsters or other similar storage devices, or through other means. This may also permit the association of codes with generator identification information acquired by collection personnel, collection vehicles or other using already-existing technology. This information may be captured, logged, communicated, and associated manually or electronically, including in an automated manner from collection vehicles 201 so that feedback related to proper bag use is easily sent directly to Generator in an automated or other manner.
Facility Inspection 105: After collection, the bags then arrive at a facility where they are inspected for example to gain information about their contents, either by hand or automated systems, such as conveyor belts with automated scanners. During inspection, the code on the bags may be read and the contents within the bag may be assessed manually or by using an appropriate technology including artificial intelligence, scanning, bio-metric scanning, imaging, laser, camera or other technology. Attaching one code multiple times on a single bag 111 provides the advantage of creating redundancy in case one or more of the codes is not clearly readable individually. Additionally printing the code on both sides of the bag allows for the bag codes to be read regardless of how they are placed on a conveying system. As an example, in. an automated inspection process, the bag may move along a conveyor and be scanned by tubular scanner, imager, biometric scanner or other device, including handheld devices, to identify the code, conduct the inspection and establish bag weight and other evaluation factors.
Scorecard Analysis 106: The inspection may preferably be used to generate an information scorecard about the material in individual bags, including but not limited to factors including weight, material composition, quality and compliance with program rules and requirements. The specific scorecard for each bag may be captured by a facility and loaded into the bag tracking tool (“database tool”) 100 for use by the program manager as illustrated by information flow 202 of
Feedback Generation 107: The database tool 100 matches a bag code and its scorecard to the specific generator, and facilitates feedback to the generator, to the program manager and to the collection worker and/or vehicle. Feedback to the generator may include education and/or fines penalties. If inspection determines that bag use is compliant with program rules, such as lack of contamination, the generator may be incentivized or rewarded. Additional feedback to collection workers and vehicles may permit these entities to administer the non-collection of bags or the distribution of educational material to generators who have previously been identified as non-compliant with program rules.
Messaging Conduit 108: The feedback loop to the generator may be provided automatically through the database tool 100 by the tool 100 triggering a message through a targeted messaging conduit, for example, including: mail, email, text messaging, a mobile application, a notification system, or a combination of these conduits. Feedback may also be provided via the program manager, collection workers or collection vehicles.
Program Manager Reporting 109: The bag code tracking tool 100 may provide program managers with multifaceted materials management information analyzed by generator andlor generator location (for example, by aggregating generators into their physical neighborhoods or materials collection routes), collection route, materials type (for example, examining whether generators on a particular route on an organics collection day are generating too much contamination), and others, including specific program compliance factors (for example, specific mandatory recycling laws by municipality). Upon Inspection, if the Bags are non-compliant (for example, containing recyclable materials that should have been separated out), non-compliance may be noted during inspection and be reflected in the bag scorecard. This scorecard information may be loaded into the database of database tool 100 and matched with the generator. Feedback may then be provided to the generator to help improve materials management including recycling, composting, reuse, or waste reduction. If inspection indicated that the bags were compliant with program rules (for example, trash bags having with no recyclables present), the generator may be incentivized or rewarded for their behavior. The feedback loop to the generator can be automatic through the database tool 100 that triggers a message through mail, email, text message, a mobile application, or a combination of the above. Feedback may also occur through the program manager, collection worker, collection vehicle, or through another notification system. As further example, if a municipality experiences contamination in its recycling, this database tool 100 could be queried to identify where contamination is occurring and tailor outreach, education, rewards, and enforcement to the specific generators who are creating the contamination. The bag code tracking tool 100 can provide multifaceted materials management information by generator, material category, neighborhood, street, and other characteristics to support these and other efforts.
In summary the bag tracking and database tool 100 depicted in
In accordance with additional aspects of the disclosure,
As illustrated for example in
In accordance with other aspects of the disclosure, and by way of example,
In accordance with further aspects ofthe disclosure,
At step 405, scanner 305 of
In summary, the following aspects of the present disclosure are highlighted:
It will be understood that, while various aspects of the present disclosure have been illustrated and described by way of example, the invention claimed herein is not limited thereto, but may be otherwise variously embodied within the scope of the following claims. For example, while the present disclosure describes a manufacturing process in which duplicate codes 111 are printed on materials management bags, an alternate embodiment of the manufacturing process might incorporate a mechanism for applying the duplicate codes 111 in the form of adhesively-applied labels.
The following table lists the reference characters and names of features and elements used herein: Reference characters assigned to method steps are not listed.
This application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) from US Provisional Patent Application No. 63/185,797, filed on May 7, 2021, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63185797 | May 2021 | US |