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Canada Fibers donates trees to Toronto

Canada Fibers donates trees to Toronto
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Canada Fibers Ltd., headquartered in Toronto, has announced that it is donating 25 trees to the city of Toronto to commemorate its 25-year relationship with the Toronto Star. Canada Fibers provided recycling programs for the Star’s Torstar Printing Group Vaughan Press Centre until it closed on July 2, 2016. The two companies continue to work together to recover discarded materials that are recycled into new products, such as paper produced at paper mills across North America.

“We believe these trees will serve as a growing reminder to citizens of Toronto of how firms can work together to enhance our environment,” says Mark Badger of Canada Fibers. He adds that “transparency, continuous improvement and good faith” provided the foundation for a 25-year relationship that created economic and environmental value on an exclusive basis. In fact, Canada Fibers’ founders have a business relationship spanning over 40 years with the Star, the company says.

Canada Fibers was established 25 years ago as a Toronto-based paper recovery and marketing operation. Since then, its scope has broadened to include recovery, separation and marketing of a wide variety of materials. Today, Canada Fibers’ supply side customers include municipalities in the province of Ontario, as well as institutional, commercial and industrial organizations. The company also is engaged in the production of consumer and industrial products from the waste it recovers through its affiliated Urban Resource Group of Cos. By way of extensive vertical integration, Canada Fibers says it provides circular economy recycling solutions to a growing customer base.

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Source: Recycling Today
Canada Fibers donates trees to Toronto
<![CDATA[Canada Fibers Ltd., headquartered in Toronto, has announced that it is donating 25 trees to the city of Toronto to commemorate its 25-year relationship with the Toronto Star. Canada Fibers provided recycling programs for the Star’s Torstar Printing Group Vaughan Press Centre until it closed on July 2, 2016. The two companies continue to work together to recover discarded materials that are recycled into new products, such as paper produced at paper mills across North America. “We believe these trees will serve as a growing reminder to citizens of Toronto of how firms can work together to enhance our environment,” says Mark Badger of Canada Fibers. He adds that “transparency, continuous improvement and good faith” provided the foundation for a 25-year relationship that created economic and environmental value on an exclusive basis. In fact, Canada Fibers’ founders have a business relationship spanning over 40 years with the Star, the company says. Canada Fibers was established 25 years ago as a Toronto-based paper recovery and marketing operation. Since then, its scope has broadened to include recovery, separation and marketing of a wide variety of materials. Today, Canada Fibers’ supply side customers include municipalities in the province of Ontario, as well as…

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