Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Recycle Your Wine Corks!

The recycling news keeps coming today! Whole Foods now makes it easy for wine lovers to recycle their corks!
Cork ReHarvest

What Do Those Crazy Numbers Mean?

What do all those numbers on the bottom of your plastic containers mean? Joey Papa's blog post makes sense of it all:
Plastic Recycling Numbers: What do They Mean?

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Recycling Audit

Here a few moments from a recycling audit that the folks at Allied Waste completed on the Valley Leadership offices in Phoenix. Thank you for your help and insight!

Friday, March 12, 2010

Building a Corporate Culture

So today at work I was discussing recycling with some of my colleagues. One of them informed me that she helped to create a recycling program for her entire university (Which happens to be located in Phoenix). It made me think. One individual can take the lead to create change and provide these services for an organization, but why should it take one hard working individual to make these things happen? Haven't we moved into a world where the option for recycling is almost expected? What can we do to help build a corporate culture so that companies take the initiative to invest in these programs?

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Great Article About Glendale's Residential Recycling Program

This is a little off topic, but I loved this article in The Arizona Republic on the city of Glendale's public outreach and education programming on recycling. So great to include school-aged children too!

Monday, February 15, 2010

Why Recycle

Why Recycle:
For the environment…

“Recycling aluminum cans in the United States in 1996 saved enough energy to power a city the size of Philadelphia for one year” (From the world watch Institute, Dec. 1998, as cited in Gordon).

“Between 1990 and 2000, Americans wasted 7.1 million tons of cans: enough to manufacture 316,000 Boeing 737 airplanes” (From Container recycling Institue, Jennifer Gitliz, “Trashed Cans: The Global Environmental Impacts of Aluminum Can Wasting in America,” 2002 as cited in Gordon)

“Recycling one ton of aluminum is equivalent to not releasing 13 tons of carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas) into the air” (From Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, "Rethinking Recycling: An Oregon Waste Reduction Curriculum," 2001, as cited in Gordon)

“The energy saved from recycling one wine bottle will operate a 100-watt light bulb for three hours” (From Calculation, courtesy of Robert Kirby, manager for R & D, Sandhill Industries, June 2003, as cited in Gordon)

“It takes approximately one million years for a glass bottle to break down at the landfill” (From Environmental Protection Agency, 2002, as cited in Gordon).

“By recycling all of its paper, plastic, and corrugated waste generated in a year, an office building of 7,000 workers could reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 1,200 metric tons of carbon equivalent. This is equivalent to taking 900 cars off the road in one year” (Environmental Protection Agency, "Solid Waste and Emergency Response," EPA 530-F-02-034, 2002, as cited in Gordon).

For the economy…
“The United States hosts 56,061 recycling and reuse establishments that employ approximately 1.1 million people, generate an annual payroll of $37 billion, and gross $236 billion in annual revenues” (Executive Summary ES 2).

“Paper, paperboard, and deinked market pulp mills, which employ 139,375 people…gross nearly $49 billion in estimated annual receipts” (Executive Summary ES 5).


“Steel mills, which employ 118,544 people…gross $46 billion in estimated annual receipts” (Executive Summary ES 5).

“Plastics converters, which employ 178,700 people…gross nearly $28 billion in estimated annual receipts” (Executive Summary ES 5).


“Iron and steel foundries, which employ 126,313 people…gross over $16 billion in annual estimated receipts”(Executive Summary ES 5).

“Economic modeling estimated that nearly 1.4 million jobs are maintained in support businesses because of the recycling and reuse industry. These jobs have a payroll of $52 billion and produce $173 billion in receipts” (Executive Summary ES 9).


“Economic modeling estimated that employee personal spending supports 1.5 million jobs with a payroll of $41 billion, and produces receipts of $146 billion” (Executive Summary ES 9).

“The Institute for Local Self- Reliance (ILSR) projected the impact of collecting and remanufacturing old newsprint (ONP) instead of paying to have the waste landfilled. ILSR found that for a city of one million residents, a single mill processing 100,000 tons of ONP per year could contribute up to $57 million in annual gross revenues to the local tax base. By contrast, disposing of the same material would cost the city $4 million in disposal costs annually (assuming an average tipping fee of $40 per ton)” (Environmental Protection Agency 3).


WORKS CITED:
Beck Inc., R.W. Final Summary US Recycling Economic Information Study. Washington, DC:
National Recycling Coalition, Inc., 2001. Print.

---. Executive Summary US Recycling Economic Information Study. Washington, DC: National
Recycling Coalition, Inc., 2001. Print.

Environmental Protection Agency. “Recycling Means Business”. Washington, DC:
Environmental Protection Agency, 1995. Print.

Gordon, Ann. The Solutions of Moab: Recycling Factoids. Web. 16 January 2010