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Care and Maintenance of Your Favorite Things
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RECYCLING |
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Recycling Facts and Figures
- In 1999, recycling and composting activities
prevented about 64 million tons of material from ending up in
landfills and incinerators. Today, this country recycles 28 percent
of its waste, a rate that has almost doubled during the past 15
years.
- While recycling has grown in general, recycling
of specific materials has grown even more drastically: 42 percent of
all paper, 40 percent of all plastic soft drink bottles, 55 percent
of all aluminum beer and soft drink cans, 57 percent of all steel
packaging, and 52 percent of all major appliances are now recycled.
- Twenty years ago, only one curbside recycling
program existed in the United States, which collected several
materials at the curb. By 1998, 9,000 curbside programs and 12,000
recyclable drop-off centers had sprouted up across the nation. As of
1999, 480 materials recovery facilities had been established to
process the collected materials.
Opportunities
For recycling to work, everyone has to participate
in each phase of the loop. From government and industry, to
organizations, small businesses, and people at home, every American can
make recycling a part of their daily routine.
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A Recycled Products Shopping
List
There are more than 4,500 recycled-content
products available, and this number continues to grow. In fact, many of
the products people regularly purchase contain recycled-content. The
following list presents just a sampling of products that can be made
with recycled content.
| Aluminum
cans |
Newspapers |
| Cereal
boxes |
Paper
towels |
| Egg
cartons |
Carpeting |
| Motor
oil |
Car
bumpers |
| Nails |
Anything
made from steel |
| Trash
bags |
Glass
containers |
| Comic
books |
Laundry
detergent bottles |
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| Overview
Recycling is a series of activities that includes
collecting recyclable materials that would otherwise be considered
waste, sorting and processing recyclables into raw materials such as
fibers, and manufacturing raw materials into new products.
Recycling Process
Collecting and processing secondary materials,
manufacturing recycled-content products, and then purchasing recycled
products creates
a circle or loop that ensures the overall success and
value of recycling.
Step 1. Collection and Processing
Collecting recyclables varies from community to community, but there
are four primary methods: curbside, drop-off centers, buy-back
centers, and deposit/refund programs.
Regardless of the method used to collect the
recyclables, the next leg of their journey is usually the same.
Recyclables are sent to a materials recovery facility to be sorted and
prepared into marketable commodities for manufacturing. Recyclables
are bought and sold just like any other commodity, and prices for the
materials change and fluctuate with the market.
Step 2. Manufacturing
Once cleaned and separated, the recyclables are ready to undergo the
second part of the recycling loop. More and more of today's products
are being manufactured with total or partial recycled content. Common
household items that contain recycled materials include newspapers and
paper towels; aluminum, plastic, and glass soft drink containers;
steel cans; and plastic laundry detergent bottles. Recycled materials
also are used in innovative applications such as recovered glass in
roadway asphalt (glassphalt) or recovered plastic in carpeting, park
benches, and pedestrian bridges.
Step 3. Purchasing Recycled Products
Purchasing recycled products completes the recycling loop. By
"buying recycled," governments, as well as businesses and
individual consumers, each play an important role in making the
recycling process a success. As consumers demand more environmentally
sound products, manufacturers will continue to meet that demand by
producing high-quality recycled products. Click
here to learn more about recycling terminology and to find tips on
identifying recycled products.
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