Plan 65's aren't too bad, pipe the seal drain to a reservoir with a level switch, address it when it gets full. Easy to record trends in seal leakage that way as well. If it filled up every 2 months when new, and now it fills up once a week, you can plan to refurb the seal soon.
There is no such thing as a "zero leakage" mechanical seal. It leaks out (single seals) at a very slow rate, or you design it to leak into the process (dual seals with barrier fluid/gas systems) so there are zero emissions.
Try to understand what you are doing. Spec a mechanical seal with a low or no allowable leakage. That means a vendor needs to meet this criteria for the duration of the warranty period. You will either get no quotes, expensive quotes to cover risk and a few replacements, or vendors who don't read all the specs. Best case scenario, vendor takes exception to the leakage limits and gives you a regular quote, in that case the only problem is that everyone involved will have wasted time having to deal with it.