Posts Tagged ‘beginning recycling’

Recycling basics

Friday, August 10th, 2012

Americans throw $600 million worth of aluminum cans in the garbage each year. Recycled, those cans would save 95 percent of their original energy cost. Cans aren’t the only materials made from precious, recyclable resources. In fact, everything from glass to paper and metal to plastic can be processed into new materials.

To get started recycling all you need is a set of bins and a little know-how. And don’t forget to check your local government for exactly what recyclables it accepts.

Paper Recycling

Paper recycling is easy: As long as it’s 100 percent paper, it can be recycled. Newspapers, cardboard, magazines and phone books are all recyclable. So are junk mailings, paper bags, cereal boxes and wrapping paper. Watch out for tape, foil, glitter and plastic coatings, however, as those are not recyclable. You can toss your cardboard milk carton in the recycle bin because there’s a market for recycled cartons. Envelopes with windows and mailing labels are also safe to recycle.

Glass Recycling

Not all types of glass can be recycled. Bottles and jars are made from a different type of glass than windows, drinking glasses and cookware; if they’re mixed together, the resulting product will be flawed. Put only glass bottles and jars in your recycling bin and leave all other types of glass out. Be sure to remove all lids: Metal lids can be recycled with other metal items. Rinse your containers, and keep them separate from the rest of your recycling. Broken glass can mix with other materials and wind up breaking the machines used to process recyclables.

Metal Recycling

Recycle cans, aluminum foil, scrap metal and anything else that is 100 percent metal and small enough to fit in your recycling bin. Rinse your cans, but don’t crush them. If you have loose lids from soup or tuna cans, place them inside the original can and bend the can slightly so the lid won’t fall out. Do the same with other small items, because if small metal pieces are mixed with paper, they can harm processing machinery.

Check all your items and remove any plastic pieces, rubber, wood and paper. If your metal piece is bigger than 30 inches by 8 inches or heavier than 30 lbs., you’ll have to take it to a scrap metal recycling facility instead of leaving it curbside.

Plastic Recycling

Look at the bottom of your plastic containers. They should be stamped with a symbol that looks like three arrows in a triangle, with a number at the center. That number is the recycling code, and you’ll need it to sort plastic. Check with your waste management provider to find out what types of plastic it recycles: Most providers will accept code 1, but few will take code 7. Only the accepted types of plastic go into the recycling bin.

Rinse containers and remove the lids, which are not recyclable. Leave out plastic bags, which you can reuse or recycle at a recycling center; bottles that have contained hazardous materials or motor oil; and Styrofoam products.

Teaching children to recycle

Wednesday, June 6th, 2012

As good environmental stewards we have to make sure that our children are aware that the trash we throw pollutes our environment unless people start recycling some of that garbage. We also have to let them know that with too much trash in our environment, we along with the fishes in the sea and the birds in the air can no longer survive.

Teach your child to observe the surroundings. Let him or her watch the corners in the community, the streets, the alleys, or his or her immediate surroundings. During these situations, point out to him the garbage that pollutes these places. Teach him or her how this garbage eventually pile up and bring about diseases among humans and kills life. During that time, tell him or her that recycling can prevent such horrible consequences from occurring.

When the child is already aware of the dangers of pollution and the need to do some waste recycling, set up a recycling bin center in your own home. There should be different bins for specific waste products. Allow the child to label these bins so he or she gets involved. There should be four bins: for glass objects, for cans, plastic materials, and cardboard or paper. Make your child aware that the trash in these bins can be recycled for future use.

Enroll your kids in classes that teach how to recycle goods. Centers ran by environmentalists often teach craft classes for paper recycling and other forms of waste recycling. Aside from teaching the kids recycling, these centers give kids an outlet to hone their creativity, which is in fact is important during their formative years.

You should lead by example. Perform your part by doing waste recycling in your own house. Kids follow the example of their elders. Throw the proper trash in the appropriate recycling bins for recycling.

You with your kid can also start a community event that focuses on recycling. You can coach your kid to perform some recycling activities with his or her friends. Through these activities, your kid and other kids experience fulfillment in being able to help out clean the environment by recycling.

Beginner’s Recycling FAQ

Sunday, April 8th, 2012

Read our revised FAQ on recycling for beginners here. Find out why you should recycle, how to start recycling and some other leading questions that you may have. Once you have read our FAQ take a look at our other resources on the website including our recycling bins to help you with more details.

Why should I recycle?
Because if you throw something away, it is no longer useful, it ends up in landfill, incinerated, or in some other way contaminating the environment. If you recycle something, it can be recovered and become material for a new product, plus it does not go to into the waste stream.

Why is it important to recycle?
Because there is a real global problem with too much waste being produced by human beings. As a species we produce so much synthetic waste that we are literally running out of space to bury it, or dispose of it in other ways without contaminating the environment.

Is it really worth recycling?
Absolutely. There is also a benefit to business and industry. The cost of recovering raw materials from existing waste items is far less than the original manufacturing process costs. There is a benefit to the environment. Using recycled materials reduces the destructive extraction processes and energy required to obtain raw materials.

Does all this really affect home waste?
Yes, between 60% and 75% of all home synthetic waste can be usefully recycled, providing all the benefits as detailed above. The more people that engage in home recycling the more resources are available for reusing these materials for new manufacturing, plus lessening the load on waste disposal.

I pay council tax towards waste collection, so why should I care?
You pay national insurance for health care, but you wouldn’t jeopardize your health! It’s the same idea, we need to realise that caring for the environment is our personal responsibility, in the same way as preserving our own health and safety.

Recycling is too much effort, can’t I just opt out?
Many people think this and assume that recycling is just for ‘green fanatics’ However, there is now overwhelming research and evidence that demonstrate the problems of synthetic waste and environmental contamination is very real and threatening our health, weather patterns and planetary eco-systems.

Isn’t this just scare mongering?
No, it’s a genuine concern amongst scientists that waste contamination and its bi-products contributes to global warming, climate change that affect wildlife and crops. Plus it produces dangerous imbalances in natural eco-systems.

How do I know my recycling is being used properly?
Why not ask the Recycling Officer at your Local Council how the collected materials are recycled? They should be able to tell you what their recycling policies are how to find out more about what materials are used for.

Why should I do something now about recycling?
Because the biggest most powerful changes lie in the habits and attitudes of ordinary people. Becoming environmentally aware and responsible is no longer an option for the few. If we want to save our world from an environmental catastrophe we must all act now and together. This is the only way to send a clear message to politicians and decision makers that we need change.

How do I start recycling at home?
Start by doing what’s easy and simple. You don’t have to be an expert over night. The first step is to start realising that there is ‘no such place as away’ so when you ‘throw something away’ it just goes some place else, for someone else to deal with or most likely becomes a contamination in the environment.

What are the basics to recycling?
Start by finding out what recycling items can be collected from the kerbside by your local council. If they provide a box or bin, start using this to recycle these items at home.

What about getting the details right?
Most local councils provide printed information or websites that detail what you can recycle and how to separate items so that there is no contamination. Some plastics need to be separated, such as milk bottle tops.

Will recycling at home cost me anything?
Recycling at home does not need to cost any money. It will cost you some time, because you usually need to wash, separate and store items for recycling collection. It may also cost something in transporting items to a drop center (collection bank) if you don’t get kerbside collections.

This all seems very simple, is it enough?
Imagine if everyone did this throughout the country! it would reduce landfill waste contamination by a huge amount. Everyone’s small efforts make a vast collective difference. Please remember, you small contribution to recycling is very important.

I just don’t have time for this, isn’t there a simple option?
Yes, just do something to reduce your landfill waste. Even one small action every day, like using your own cup at work reduces polystyrene waste. Multiply this by several thousand and it becomes significant. Start small, but don’t opt out completely. Every  recycling action counts!

Reasons to recycle

Tuesday, January 31st, 2012

If you haven’t been diligent about recycling your garbage, here are seven good reasons why you should start.

It cuts back on global warming. Our planet is starting to feel the effects of global warming already—and we need to do whatever we can to lessen the impact. Production of certain materials from scratch can release significant amounts of CO2 into the atmosphere. Aluminum production is a prime example—producing new aluminum creates 95% more CO2 than recycling old aluminum cans. In addition, recycling paper saves trees—for each ton of paper recycled, 17 trees are saved. Each of these trees can extract around 250 pounds of carbon dioxide from the air in a year.

It makes us more energy-efficient. It often takes a great deal more energy to create something from scratch than to recycle it. For example, it takes twice as much energy to burn plastic as to recycle it; it takes 64% more energy to make paper than to recycle it; and recycling just one pound of steel can save enough energy to run a 60-watt bulb for one day.

It keeps our landfills from overflowing. We’re fast running out of space for landfills—especially near cities. Seaside cities have been dumping trash into their oceans for decades to circumvent the problem, but with widespread marine ecological collapse, this is no longer a viable option. Worse yet, it’s difficult to find land in suburban and rural areas whose residents will allow landfills to come into their areas without a fight. The squeeze for landfill land is only going to get worse in the future.

It improves the quality of our groundwater. The garbage in landfills is usually not treated in any way—it’s simply thrown in a big hole and buried over. Much of this garbage is not environmentally friendly or readily biodegradable—and it’s no surprise that contaminants can get into our water. Rain and other runoff from landfills gets into our streams, rivers, lakes, and other waterways, damaging fragile ecosystems. It’s also a major reason why it’s not safe to drink from streams and rivers when you’re hiking and camping—even when it looks like you’re in a pristine environment. Recycling reduces the trash in landfills, and the more we recycle, the more our water systems can start becoming as pure as they look.

It reduces air pollution. Many factories that produce plastics, metals, and paper products release toxins into the air. Recycle these materials, and there will be less need for companies to manufacture new materials—saving on the amount of pollution dumped into our atmosphere. In addition, disposing of certain recyclable materials can also produce significant pollution. For example, plastics are often burned in incinerators. Plastics are made with oil, and that oil is released into the atmosphere when the plastic burns—creating serious greenhouse-gas emissions.

It creates jobs. From manufacturing to processing, from collection to invention—it’s no secret that recycling is a growth industry, earning billions of dollars annually. Our need to recycle is only going to grow more urgent as populations grow and as technology changes. Recycling creates far more jobs than landfills do—enough jobs to make a big difference in a small town.

It’s good business. Pitting business against the environment is a lose-lose situation: everybody suffers. And yet, that’s how the debate has been framed in politics and the public sphere for years. This is a shame, because the truth is that recycling just makes good business sense. Industrial factories and processing plants save plenty of money on energy and extraction strategies when they use recycled materials instead of virgin resources. They also ensure that basic resources don’t become a scarce commodity, keeping demand and prices down and ensuring that their business can continue for decades to come.

One person can make a difference. With so many good causes, it’s easy to get discouraged—especially when the problem is so widespread that it’s hard to see what difference your individual effort is making. Many people think this is true with recycling, too—but the truth is that small acts of recycling make a big difference. For example, recycling just one large newspaper would save around 75,000 trees.

Office recycling provides many envromental benefits

Sunday, December 18th, 2011

Office recycling programs are simple to put into place. While the program implemented for each individual office building is different, a typical office recycling program will proceed as follows:

  • A specially designed paper collection container will be given to every employee and, depending on space, can be placed either on or beneath each desk and work station. A list of “acceptable” and “unacceptable” types of paper will be printed on the container.
  • Throughout the day, as waste paper is generated, each employee will place used white paper in the container.
  • The small desk containers can be emptied by each employee, or by your building’s cleaning service, into a larger office container.
  • When the large containers are full, they are dumped into our toters, at which time the paper will be removed and taken back to the World Recycling plant to be processed.

This can decrease the amount of rubbish being sent to landfills and the amount of trees being forested for paper. Inform your staff that office recycling will happen, and you might find that your office will look a lot tidier.

Becoming an ecological business also improves your image and you might find an increase in popularity from associates and customers. Your staff will take pride in their job if they work for a business that assists with the protection of the environment through office recycling, and the values of being eco-friendly. Not only can recycling benefit your business image it can also make your team feel more involved and appreciated.

Before you start an office recycling recycling plan within the office, construct surveys to see where in the office is most wasteful. The conventional office wastes a high amount of white paper so position recycling bins by the printers, this might also inspire staff to take extra care when printing off documents to make no errors. Also equip the kitchen with a range of recycling bins for various materials such as plastic, glass bottles and food waste.

Office recycling can save a lot of businesses money since many recycled waste collections are complimentary whereas commercial waste collection costs money. There are a variety of other ways that businesses can save expenses through recycling.  Being a more positive and eco-friendly business will generally improve your efficiency, allowing the workforce to work together and raising awareness for the issue.

The importance of home recycling

Thursday, December 15th, 2011

Home recycling bins are specifically designed for storing and containing each waste material. These recycling boxes will often come in different colors making it easier and more recognizable to distinguish between each type of waste recycling. Getting everyone involved in this process especially the children is a great way to learn about and the importance of sustainability, conservation and recycling at an early age.

Many of the modern recycling bins now have multi-compartmental spaces, which is ideal for separating each of the recycling materials. All packaging now displays a recycling symbol or will indicate whether or not the material and product itself can or cannot be recycled. A good idea is to locate any recycling boxes and bins next to the trash receptacle as an easy and convenient place when disposing of waste.

Waste recycling is particularly beneficial to the environment. Perhaps the biggest environmental benefit is the dramatic reduction of waste that is dumped in landfill sites and the correct use of home recycling bins can be a part of this fight. Recycling waste will encourage the conservation of natural resources such as oil and gas for a lot longer, and increasingly leads to cost savings in the production of new products and packaging.

Globally and increasingly recently there is a widespread awareness and movement towards recycling and reusing the resources we use and consume. But no initiative is more important than the home recycling that starts with you.

Today’s advanced recycling bins

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

recyclingWaste recycling is particularly beneficial to the environment. Perhaps the biggest environmental benefit is the dramatic reduction of waste that is dumped in landfill sites and the correct use of home recycling bins can be a part of this fight. Recycling waste will encourage the conservation of natural resources such as oil and gas for a lot longer, and increasingly leads to cost savings in the production of new products and packaging.

Many communities supply a standard recycling bin, but there are now various home recycling bins on the market and the consumer encouragingly has a wide choice now in recycling bins to fit the pocket and style of every household.

Home recycling bins are specifically designed for storing and containing each waste material. These recycling boxes will often come in different colours making it easier and more recognisable to distinguish between each type of waste recycling. Getting everyone involved in this process especially the children is a great way to learn about and the importance of sustainability, conservation and recycling at an early age.

Many of the modern recycling boxes and bins now have multi-compartmental spaces, which is ideal for separating each of the recycling materials. All packaging now displays a recycling symbol or will indicate whether or not the material and product itself can or cannot be recycled. A good idea is to locate any recycling bins next to the trash receptacle as an easy and convenient place when disposing of waste.

recycling bins

The benefits of recycling

Friday, August 26th, 2011

recyclingThere are many different reasons and advantages of recycling old materials to turn into new, similar products. Recycling benefits relate to many different areas, some of which could greatly improve the air we breathe, and the environment.

All man-made products incorporate raw materials to create the finished product. This involves harvesting the earth’s natural resources (e.g. wood, metal) in order to acquire the raw materials. Deforestation is a prime example of how harvesting natural resources is harming the environment. This could be reduced if we recycle more paper and old wooden products.

Recycling reduces the amount of energy needed to create a new, similar product. If we didn’t recycle paper, more trees would have to be chopped down, transported, and manufactured into the finished product.

This reason why you should recycle is a very important one, as energy conservation is one of the key ingredients for the fight against climate change. Tied in with energy saving, is the reduction of pollution as a result of manufacturing processes becoming more efficient.

Any reduction in CO2 or other harmful gases is not only a key ingredient for the fight against climate change, but a key ingredient for cleaning the air we breathe.

If we can reduce pollution levels from the manufacturing industry by a significant level, this could have a positive impact on our health.

The more we recycle, the more we can help to reduce the burden on local and national landfill sites. As population levels increase, we will need to find more landfill sites, which will harm the surrounding environment and wildlife.

This is another important reason why we should recycle more, in order to reduce the impact landfills have on the surrounding environment.

Follow Recycling Supply Company on Facebook for much more information.

How to start an office recycling program

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

office recycling

Recycling offers businesses a way to avoid disposing of the waste that cannot be prevented. Many businesses are collecting bottles, cans, paper, corrugated cardboard, and other recyclable materials.

Producing recycled paper creates 74% less air pollution and 35% less water pollution than producing paper from trees. Recycling aluminum creates 95% less air pollution and 97% less water pollution than producing aluminum from ore.

Did you know that every ton of paper recycled saves seventeen full grown trees?

If your company wants to recycle, you will need to design a system to collect the recyclable materials. Sometimes a company is responsible for transporting the collected materials to the recycling facility. It might be wise to contact a waste hauler or a local recycling company who is responsible for cleaning, transporting, and other steps in the recycling chain.

You will need to buy some sturdy and attractive recycling bins for your office. Thankfully there are many fine office recycling bins available for new recycling programs today.

Most employees care about the environment and will appreciate the opportunity to work together on a project to help the environment. You may want to develop a waste reduction team consisting of members that represent different departments. Some companies can effectively reach all their employees by circulating memos or holding an informal meeting.

These messages can be conveyed in a variety of ways, such as staff meetings, employee newsletters, posters, signs, flyers, and electronic mail. Special events such as slogan contests, awards, or other recognition for waste reduction activities can be effective tools for conveying waste reduction programs.

Employees will feel a greater stake in the program if they receive frequent updates on the quantity of waste being reduced, reused, or recycled; the recycled products being purchased and the cost savings that have resulted. Another method of sustaining employee interest is to empower them to submit new ideas for increasing the efficiency of company operations.

recycle earth

Why recycle?

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

recycling

Recycling is more important than ever because just throwing away trash in a landfill or digging a hole and burying it is not a solution to the waste problem. Most natural trash items like food can break down and decompose in a matter of weeks, leaving no trace of it in the environment. But for man-made products like glass, plastic bags and aluminum cans it may take months or years to break down. Here are some averages for how long it takes certain products to biodegrade in the earth:

  • Plastic soda bottles: 1 million years
  • Glass: 1 million years
  • Aluminum cans: 50 to 200 years
  • Paper: 1 to 5 months
  • Disposable diaper: 500 years
  • Batteries: 100 years

Check out these Reasons to Recycle

What can be recycled?

There are thousands of items that can be recycled and reused as new products. Listed below are the most common items:

  • Glass Recycling – Clear glass soda bottles, packaged jars and anything with a “G” logo.
  • Plastic Recycling – Plastic soda bottles and milk jugs, shampoo and motor oil containers and anything marked with a 1 or 2 code.
  • Metal Recycling – Aluminum soda cans and scrap metal.
  • Paper – Printer paper, newspaper, magazines and colored paper.

There are also many products whose components are recyclable, such as computers. And products that you wouldn’t even think could be recycled, such as automobile tires, can be broken down and reused on roadways and for shower tiles.

What are the benefits of recycling?

Recycling benefits everyone and everything. Here are a few reasons why:

  • Conserves natural resources such as wood, water and minerals
  • Saves energy because less energy is used to manufacture brand new products
  • Produces less greenhouse gases because industries burn fewer fossil fuels
  • Recycling programs cost less than waste disposal programs
  • You can receive money for turning in certain recyclable products
  • Recycling centers create 4 jobs for every 1 job in the waste disposal industry
  • Recycling programs keep 70 tons of waste from being deposited into landfills every year
  • Prevents the destruction of natural habitats
  • Decreases soil erosion associated with mining and logging

How can you get involved in recycling?

You can recycle at your own home by buying home recycling bins to use as containers to hold recycling items until you take them (or they are picked up by your city or county) to a recycling center.