Trigger Sprayer Bottles for Household Cleaning Chemicals Environmentally Sound, Space-Conservative

Trigger Sprayer

Trigger Sprayer

With a large stake in plastics manufacturing on mass-distribution levels, an industry-leading plastic bottle manufacturer and cosmetic products packaging specialist has advised users to consider using plastics for something other than just storing cosmetics.

Arminak & Associates president Helga Arminak devotes her daily business hours to the distribution of quality packaging products in the cosmetics industry. Where her company has been an industry-leading distributor and supplier of such niche cosmetic packaging items as specialty cylindrical lipstick packaging, aluminum tubes, airless trigger sprayer bottles and bottle-top foaming pumps, she also sees the margin for her products to be used successfully in everyday home life.

“Though most of our products aim at, or are intended for, business-to-business transactions and large quantity distribution, we also see the need for consumers to be more sensible about the bottles they are using to store chemicals they depend upon,” says Helga Arminak, president and founder of a cosmetic bottle manufacturer that sits atop the mountain as an unrivaled industry figurehead.

“Though we would like to see our products used however consumers find a need for them, we’ve come to a point in our day and age where the plastics we use have begun to clog up our landfills. In some cases, this plastic also creates opportunities for their purchasing consumers to reduce, recycle, and reuse.”

Helga states that through the reuse and recycling of bottles, we can do our part to make sure that future generations aren’t sitting around cleaning up our mess. As we progress into a day and age that requires us to be more sensible than ever about the choices we make that impact our environment, issues and consequences that we’ve put off observing for another day can no longer be ignored.

Residents of Raleigh, NC, a relatively small section of the world compared to larger metropolises in California and New York, recently moved to ban two types of plastic from local landfills and transfer centers: PET plastic, which is used to make soda bottles, and HDPE plastic, which is used to make milk jugs, detergent containers and shampoo bottles. They have moved towards this initiative due to what they cite as over 600 tons of disposed-of plastic being dumped in their landfill over the course of just one year. The recently-confounded law act will create jobs, and most importantly, impact the environment positively.

Analysts observed that while consumers in North Carolina throw away about 288 million plastic pounds annually, that only about 45 million pounds actually ends up being recovered for recycling.

“We can make a difference here, and the time to start doing so is now,” again professes Helga Arminak. “The impact that we’ve had on our atmosphere and environment over the course of just the last 40 years is something no one could have anticipated.”

“Yet, we have a unique opportunity to drive home more conducive habits, and raise awareness so that people everywhere can start instituting initiatives of their own to reduce plastic consumption, be more sensible about their overall choices about the products they buy and how they store them, then being doing their part to clean up our environment!”

Visit this industry-leading cosmetics products packaging manufacturer’s website at www.arminak-associates.com.

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