James Cropper
Launched to coincide with World Book Day and aimed at children aged 2-7, the story follows Whitney, a lovable yet ‘picky’ Wasteater who thrives on clean, dry recyclables but falls ill after taking a wrong bite from mixed or contaminated bins.

James Cropper Paper & Packaging, Britain’s master papermakers with over 180 years of heritage, has partnered with century-old sustainable waste management company Biffa to produce Whitney the Wasteater and the Wrong Bite, a playful new children’s storybook designed to encourage proper recycling habits and community engagement.

Launched to coincide with World Book Day and aimed at children aged 2-7, the story follows Whitney, a lovable yet ‘picky’ Wasteater who thrives on clean, dry recyclables but falls ill after taking a wrong bite from mixed or contaminated bins. The tale blends imaginative storytelling with practical lessons on sorting materials correctly, making recycling both fun and educational for children and families alike.

James Cropper supplied the storybook’s paper through its world-first CupCycling process, a system that has the capacity to upcycle up to 700 million used coffee cups per year, but in reality, only around 58 million are recycled annually, depending on whether people buy, use, and return the correct type of cup. Each copy of Whitney the Wasteater and the Wrong Bite is made from approximately 15 recycled coffee cups, turning everyday waste into something children can hold, read, and enjoy.

With an estimated 3.2 billion disposable cups used in the UK each year, less than 2% are currently recycled, showing that while the infrastructure exists, participation remains a challenge. Programmes like CupCycling demonstrate how industry-led innovation can step in where policy falls short, turning everyday waste into high-quality, environmentally responsible products and offering young readers a tangible example of the Circular Economy in action.

James Crooper
Each copy of Whitney the Wasteater and the Wrong Bite is made from approximately 15 recycled coffee cups, turning everyday waste into something children can hold, read, and enjoy.

Major high-street brands, including Costa Coffee and Greggs, are part of this system. Customers can return their PE-lined cups to Costa stores to ensure they are collected and brought back into the CupCycling process. Many cups claim to be recyclable or compostable, but only PE-lined cups are suitable for this system, so it’s important to check the material.

Jordan Scott, head of marketing at James Cropper, said, “We’re proud to support Biffa on this project by supplying CupCycling paper. Whitney the Wasteater and the Wrong Bite brings recycling to life in a playful, tangible way. Children can see, touch, and hold proof that everyday materials, like a simple coffee cup, can become something beautiful when we sort and recycle correctly. It’s a story that connects imagination with real-world sustainability.”

The Wasteaters programme, created by Biffa in 2016 and relaunched last summer, uses colourful monster characters to make recycling fun and visible. The storybook will be incorporated into around 1,000 school visits per year and community engagement activities, with 100% of proceeds donated to WasteAid, supporting global initiatives that help communities manage and repurpose waste safely and sustainably.

Georgia Gibson, Biffa’s social value manager in Manchester, said, “Breathing life into one of our Wasteater characters in a children’s book is a wonderful way to spark curiosity about recycling from an early age.

“By using rhyme and imagination, we’re helping youngsters see how their choices matter, and how small everyday actions can make a big difference to the environment.”

Author Yasmine Anane, said, “Whitney is kind, funny and very picky, which makes her the perfect character to help children understand recycling. The story shows that when we all get it right together, everyone benefits.”

James Cropper’s CupCycling technology is one of only two processes in the UK capable of recycling PE-lined post-consumer coffee cups at scale. It rescues 95% of paper fibers for use in bespoke papers, while 5% of the plastic lining is used for energy recovery. The facility exemplifies how circular innovation, supply chain collaboration, and material expertise can deliver measurable environmental impact.

Whitney the Wasteater and the Wrong Bite is available via wasteaters.giftfindershop.co.uk, offering families, schools, and libraries a playful introduction to recycling and a real-world demonstration of circular economy in action.

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Naresh Khanna – 12 January 2026

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