About Invevni
INVEVNI LLC is a distributor of recovered fiber for recycling purposes. We are based in Florida and export our products from various locations in the USA to Mexico by truck, rail or ocean freight.
INVEVNI is a Florida-based exporter of recovered fiber for recycling purposes. Recycling paper involves turning waste paper into new products, including toilet paper, wrapping paper, packaging, greetings cards, cardboard boxes, paper bags, and more paper is one of the easiest products to recycle. This prevents waste and also conserves resources and energy used when making paper from scratch. By reusing paper, we prolong the lifecycle of the materials and reduce the carbon footprint of the manufacturing process.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the United States cites landfills as the single largest source of methane emissions to the atmosphere and has identified the decomposition of paper as among the most significant sources of landfill methane. A potent gas with 21 times the heat-trapping power of CO2, methane is a major contributor to global climate change. The United States use enough paper in a single day to fill the 838 miles of the Library of Congress nearly FIVE times. Paper recycling helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It takes 70% less energy and water to recycle paper than to create new paper products from trees. Recycling just one ton of paper saves 17 trees as well as 3.3 cubic yards of landfill space. Paper mills use toxic chemicals and are some of the worst manufacturing polluters. Paper recycling avoids the use of these harmful paper mills, reducing air pollution by up to 74%.
INVEVNI LLC exports recovered fiber from the United States to paper mills in Mexico, Canada and other countries. Waste paper is considered as a major source of cellulose, and use as a raw material for producing new paper products. The company sells postconsumer fiber such as:
- Paper, paperboard, and fibrous materials from retail stores, office buildings, homes, and so forth, after they have passed through their end-usage as a consumer item, including used corrugated boxes; old newspapers, old magazines, mixed wastepaper, tabulating cards and used cordage.
- All paper, paperboard, and fibrous materials that enter and are collected from municipal solid waste.
- Dry paper and paperboard waste generated after completion of the papermaking process (that is, those manufacturing operations up to and including the cutting and trimming of the paper machine reel into smaller rolls or rough sheets) including envelope cuttings, bindery trimmings, and other paper and paperboard waste resulting from printing, cutting, forming, and other converting operations, bag, box, and carton manufacturing wastes, and butt rolls, mill wrappers, and rejected unused stock.
- Repulped finished paper and paperboard from obsolete inventories of paper and paperboard manufacturers, merchants, wholesalers, dealers, printers, converters, or others