Friday, March 2, 2012

Free Pallets - Ten Places to Find Them | Packaging Revolution

March 2, 2012 by  
Filed under Pallets

We often receive inquiries about where to find free pallets to start a home project, or more steady sources of used pallets to generate work as a pallet street vendor or a pallet recycling business. Free pallets are more common for unusual sizes or small qualities, while larger quantities of standard sized pallets often command a price. Small quantities of old pallets are often picked up by pallet street vendors, commonly referred to as pallet pickers, may accumulate small quantities. Larger pallet recycling companies provide dock sweeps for larger businesses, and national level pallet recyclers such as IFCO Systems may provide national pallet removal services for multi-site customers.

Ten Places to Find Free Pallets

Scrap pallets, commonly known as pallet “cores” in the recycling business, can be found in a great variety of places where pallets are emptied, or where they are disposed. Here are ten sources for free pallets:

  • Small businesses
  • Construction sites
  • Manufacturing or processing plants
  • Trucking terminals
  • Air freight forwarders
  • Institutions
  • Hotels and restaurants
  •  Landfills
  • Recycling companies
  • Craigslist.org or other online or print ads offering free pallet removal

Free Pallets or Fee: A Few or Many?

Whether you receive pallets for free or pay for their acquisition depends upon numerous factors. You are more likely to acquire pallets for free from a smaller location that generates pallets only infrequently, or if the pallet sizes are not the most common and desirable.

You are more likely to pay for truckload quantities of popular pallet sizes, such as 48×40” in the Americas. Larger generators of surplus pallet cores often have an expectation of being paid for them. You will soon get an idea of what prevailing market prices are for cores in your area, and these vary from region to region, depending upon supply and demand. The Recycle Record is a market report that provides regional information about recycled pallet pricing. In addition to price, pallet recyclers may also compete for cores with respect to service. The pallet recycler may be required to drop empty trailers for the business to load as it generates empty pallets, or to provide smaller quantity pickup if the business does not have room or a dock door to facilitate storage of empty pallets inside or on a drop trailer.

Where only small quantities are available, however, or where the pallets are not one of the popular sizes such as 48×40”, however, then pallets are more likely to be happily released at no charge to the collector. It should be cautioned, however, that pallets stored outside of a small business are not necessarily “free for the taking.” The pallet collector should receive permission from the business owner before removing pallets. For the hobbyist looking for scrap pallets, another source of free pallets may be at larger recyclers that do not practice wood grinding. Some of them are willing to release certain types or sizes of pallet that may not have value to them.

One cautionary note is the issue of pallet markings. If the pallet has an ownership stamp on it, such as CHEP, PECO, iGPS, Coca-Cola, U.S. Postal Service or others, then these pallets should not be removed. Such companies vigorously enforce the property rights to their pallets, and you may find yourself charged with unlawful possession of them.

For picking up smaller pallet quantities, pallet street vendors may use flat bed or pickup trucks, and sometimes utility trailers. Be sure to practice pallet handling safety. Use gloves to protect hands from slivers, use proper lifting technique, including keeping the pallet close to the torso and back straight. Because pallets can often weigh 60 pounds or more, proper lifting technique should be employed, utilizing the help of other individuals or lift equipment such as forklifts where available.

Larger recyclers often purchase pallets from pallet street vendors who accumulate pallets from small businesses. Typically they drop these off at the recycler’s yard, sorting them into appropriate stacks after arrival. Many recycling businesses now take safeguards to prevent any concern about dealing in stolen pallets. As such, they may require a photocopy of the street vendor’s driver’s license, and pay by check.

0 comments:

Post a Comment