Stakeholder Map

A coordinated system across the carbon recovery chain.

Pink Dot only works if packaging, venues, consumers, haulers, processors, cities, product buyers, and CDR partners share one operating language.

Brands
package marks
Venues
bins, bags + signs
Users
simple sorting
Haulers
cleaner streams
Processors
conversion pathways
Markets
products + CDR
Packaging Brands

Put carbon recovery instructions directly on the package.

Submit specs, identify eligible components, receive Pink Dot label guidance, and reduce consumer guessing at the source.

Material Suppliers + Converters

Design for site-approved carbon recovery.

Align fiber, food-serviceware, coatings, compostables, bio-based materials, and components with downstream recovery specifications.

Retail + Grocery

Separate donation, edible surplus, scraps, fiber, and back-of-house streams.

Prepared foods, produce, cafés, pizza boxes, paper fiber, FOG, and back-of-house prep waste can be mapped into one coherent site system.

QSRs + Food Chains

Make sorting simple for customers and staff.

Cups, sleeves, napkins, food boxes, pizza boxes, fiber trays, scraps, leftovers, grease, and exclusions can be marked at the item/component level.

Airports + Controlled Venues

Create visible carbon recovery infrastructure without rebuilding the facility.

Use labels, Pink Dot stickers, pink bags, signage, carts, and existing bin stations before major capex or new permanent infrastructure.

Haulers

Collect cleaner streams for many end markets.

Pink Dot bags, bin overlays, route-level labels, contamination audits, and destination records create a better handoff from public space to processors.

Conversion + Recovery Facilities

Improve feedstock supply for high-demand products.

Clean streams can support AD, gasification, HTC, HTL, pyrolysis, composting, biocrude, SAF, diesel, RNG, biochar, nutrients, and materials.

Cities + CDR Buyers

Connect public behavior to climate, waste, and product outcomes.

Municipal systems, climate programs, carbon buyers, fuel buyers, material buyers, and registry partners can coordinate around one visible consumer interface.