Waste Re-Use

Every consumer goods company generates some material that cannot be used or sold. At P&G, that material ranges from shampoo wash-out and wood pulp to outdated mascara. But through our GARP program, we keep such materials from disposal by determining creative alternate uses.

Much more than recycling, GARP (Global Asset Recovery Purchases) turns “garbage into good.” Elsewhere in our industry, most of these materials would be considered waste, destined either for landfill or incineration. But thanks to GARP, they are used and often sold for re-use, thereby reducing raw material consumption by other companies.

Our GARP team is charged with finding external partners who can turn waste and non-performing inventory into something useful. So when a P&G site has something they haven’t been able to recycle, GARP steps in to help.

In the last year alone, this small group of garbage gurus has diverted tens of thousands of tons from landfills and has delivered tens of millions of dollars in cost recovery to the company by selling or donating materials to others who can reuse the materials.

At P&G, over 96% of all material that comes in goes out as finished product—the GARP team works hard to find a good home for the rest.

At P&G, over 96% of the material we use is converted into finished product—but the GARP team works hard to find a good home for the rest. Here are just a few examples: