User Contributed Dictionary
- past of recycle
Adjective
recycled- That has been through a recycling process
- This cardboard is made from recycled paper
Extensive Definition
Recycling is the reprocessing of old materials
into new products, with the aims of preventing the waste of
potentially useful materials, reducing the consumption of fresh raw
materials, reducing energy usage, reducing air (from
incineration) and
water (from landfilling) pollution by
reducing the need for "conventional" waste disposal, and lowering
greenhouse
gas emissions as compared to virgin production. These materials
are either brought to a collection centre or picked-up from the
curbside; and sorted , cleaned and reprocessed into new products
bound for manufacturing.
To judge the environmental benefits of recycling,
the cost of this entire process must be compared to the cost of
virgin extraction. In order for recycling to be economically
viable, there usually must be a steady supply of recyclates and
constant demand for the reprocessed goods; both of which can be
stimulated through government legislation.
History
Early recycling
Recycling has been a common practice for most of human history, with recorded advocates as far back as Plato in 400 BC. During periods when resources were scarce, archaeological studies of ancient waste dumps show less household waste (such as ash, broken tools and pottery)—implying more waste was being recycled in the absence of new material.In pre-industrial
times, there is evidence of scrap bronze and other metals being
collected in Europe and melted
down for perpetual reuse, For example, though recycling might make
economic sense in a densely populated area where virgin materials
are scarce and disposal costs high, legislated recycling in other
situations would only bring unnecessary economic hardship. |-
!Material!!Energy Savings!!Air Pollution Savings |-
|Aluminium||95%
The
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has also
concluded in favour of recycling, saying that recycling efforts
reduced the country's carbon
emissions by a net 49 metric
tonnes in 2005. John Tierney's extensive New York Times
article, titled "Recycling is Garbage", was also highly critical of
recycling, saying "the simplest and cheapest option is usually to
bury garbage in an environmentally safe landfill", and claiming
that "recycling may be the most wasteful activity in modern
America: a waste of time and money, a waste of human and natural
resources".
Import and export of recyclates
The value of recyclates can be seen by the fact
that certain countries have begun to import the unprocessed
materials. Some have complained that the ultimate fate of
recyclates sold to another country is unknown and they may end up
in landfill instead of reprocessed. According to one report, in
America, 50-80% of computers destined for recycling are actually
not recycled . However, Pieter van Beukering, an economist
specialising in waste imports of
China and India, believes that
it is unlikely that bought materials would merely be dumped in
landfill: he also claims that the import of recyclates allows for
large-scale reprocessing, improving both the fiscal and
environmental return through economies
of scale. Some highlights from the article:
- In cases where recycling truly does save resources, such as with large scraps of aluminum, this will be reflected in market prices, and voluntary recycling will take place. Thus, there is no need for the government to mandate it.
- Tree farmers plant more trees than they cut down.
- Government mandated recycling is more expensive than putting the garbage into landfills, which means that this recycling uses up more resources than it saves.
- Some small towns with landfills are happy to import garbage from other cities and states because it provides jobs and tax revenue.
- Today's modern landfills are much cleaner and safer, and much less likely to leak and pollute than the landfills of the past.
- Modern landfills often collect the methane produced by the decomposition of the biological wastes (which would have otherwise escaped into the atmosphere adding to global warming) and use the gas as fuel to produce electricity for the surrounding communities.
- Regarding the claim that the U.S. is running out of landfill space, Tierney wrote, "A. Clark Wiseman, an economist at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Wash., has calculated that if Americans keep generating garbage at current rates for 1,000 years, and if all their garbage is put in a landfill 100 yards deep, by the year 3000 this national garbage heap will fill a square piece of land 35 miles on each side. This doesn't seem a huge imposition in a country the size of America. The garbage would occupy only 5 percent of the area needed for the national array of solar panels proposed by environmentalists. The millennial landfill would fit on one-tenth of 1 percent of the range land now available for grazing in the continental United States. And if it still pains you to think of depriving posterity of that 35-mile square, remember that the loss will be only temporary. Eventually, like previous landfills, the mounds of trash will be covered with grass and become a minuscule addition to the nation's 150,000 square miles of parkland."
In a 2002 article for The Heartland Institute,
Jerry Taylor, director of natural resource studies at the Cato
Institute, wrote, "If it costs X to deliver newly manufactured
plastic to the market, for example, but it costs 10X to deliver
reused plastic to the market, we can conclude the resources
required to recycle plastic are 10 times more scarce than the
resources required to make plastic from scratch. And because
recycling is supposed to be about the conservation of resources,
mandating recycling under those circumstances will do more harm
than good."
The city of Santa
Clarita, California was paying $28 per ton to put garbage into
a landfill. The city then adopted a diaper recycling program that
cost $1,800 per ton.
All recycling techniques consume energy for
transportation and processing and some also use considerable
amounts of water, although recycling processes seldom amount to the
level of resource use associated with raw materials
processing.
There may also be drawbacks with the collection
methods associated with recycling. Increasing collections of
separated wastes adds to vehicle movements and the production of
carbon dioxide. This may be negated however by centralized
facilities such as some advanced
material recovery facilities and
mechanical biological treatment systems for the separation of
mixed
wastes. It has been calculated that collecting waste and
disposing it in a landfill is about $60 a ton opposed to separate
collecting and taking it to be recycled costs $150 a ton.
Recycled materials also sometimes cost more
financially than their non-recycled versions. This is not universal
to every recycled product, but it does occur.
Negative consequences from mercury recycling have
been cited by The
Wall Street Journal. The article traces mercury recovered from
American recycling programs into sales of mercury for alluvial mining
activities in Brazil. During the autumn of 2006, the European
Union banned the export of liquid mercury, and a life-cycle
analysis prior to institution of recycling programs may reduce the
risk of unintended environmental consequences.
Michael Munger, the Chair of Political Science at
Duke
University, argued that the financial costs of recycling some
materials outweigh the environmental benefits, and that the
environmental benefits of recycling do not compensate for the extra
effort it may require. In a 2007 article, he wrote, "... if
recycling is more expensive than using new materials, it can't
possibly be efficient... There is a simple test for determining
whether something is a resource... or just garbage... If someone
will pay you for the item, it's a resource... But if you have to
pay someone to take the item away... then the item is
garbage."
In the US, recycling facilities currently
generate estimated revenues of $2,981 million a year. Growth has
exceeded 7 percent per year for the past five years (from 2003 to
2008) due to rising waste volumes and increasing recyclable
commodity prices. New initiatives can change the industry. For
example in California, and New York moves to raise the requirements
for the set amount of waste to be diverted from the waste stream
from 50 percent to 75 percent can produce healthy profits for
companies that collect and process recyclables.
Legislation
Supply
In order for a recycling program to work, having a large, stable supply of recyclable material is crucial. Three legislative options have been used to create such a supply: mandatory recycling collection, container deposit legislation, and refuse bans. Mandatory collection laws set recycling targets for cities to aim for, usually in the form that a certain percentage of a material must be diverted from the city's waste stream by a target date. The city is then responsible for working to meet this target.Governments
have used their own purchasing
power to increase recycling demand through what are called
"procurement policies". These policies are either "set-asides",
which earmark a certain amount of spending solely towards recycled
products, or "price preference" programs which provide a larger
budget
when recycled items are purchased. Additional regulations can
target specific cases: in the US, for example, the
Environmental Protection Agency mandates the purchase of oil,
paper, tires and building insulation from recycled or re-refined
sources whenever possible.
Batteries
The large variation in size and type of batteries makes their recycling extremely difficult: they must first be sorted into similar kinds and each kind requires an individual recycling process. Additionally, older batteries contain mercury and cadmium, harmful materials which must be handled with care. Because of their potential environmental damage, proper disposal of used batteries is required by law in many areas. Unfortunately, this mandate has been difficult to enforce.Lead-acid batteries, like those used in automobiles, are relatively
easy to recycle and many regions have legislation requiring vendors
to accept used products. In the United States, the recycling rate
is 90%, with new batteries containing up to 80% recycled material.
Any grade of steel can be recycled to top quality new metal, with
no 'downgrading' from prime to lower quality materials as steel is
recycled repeatedly. 42% of crude steel produced is
recycled material.
Non-ferrous metals
Aluminium is
shredded and ground into small pieces or crushed into bales. These
pieces or bales are melted in an aluminium smelter to produce
molten aluminium. By this stage the recycled aluminium is
indistinguishable from virgin aluminium and further processing is
identical for both. This process does not produce any change in the
metal, so aluminium can be recycled indefinitely.
Recycling aluminium saves 95% of the
energy cost of processing new aluminium.
Glass
Glass bottles and jars are gathered via curbside collection schemes and bottle banks, where the glass may be sorted into color categories. The collected glass cullet is taken to a glass recycling plant where it is monitored for purity and contaminants are removed. The cullet is crushed and added to a raw material mix in a melting furnace. It is then mechanically blown or molded into new jars or bottles. Glass cullet is also used in the construction industry for aggregate and glassphalt. Glassphalt is a road-laying material which comprises around 30% recycled glass. Glass can be recycled indefinitely as its structure does not deteriorate when reprocessed.Paper
Paper can be recycled by reducing it to pulp and combing it with pulp from
newly harvested wood. As the recycling process causes the paper
fibres to breakdown, each time paper is recycled its quality
decreases. This means that either a higher percentage of new fibres
must be added, or the paper downcycled into lower quality products.
Any writing or colouration of the paper must first be removed by
deinking, which also
removes fillers, clays, and fiber fragments.
Almost all paper can be recycled today, but some
types are harder to recycle than others. Papers coated with plastic
or aluminium foil, and papers that are waxed, pasted, or gummed are
usually not recycled because the process is too expensive. Gift
wrap paper also cannot be recycled due to the its already low
quality. Many international organisations collect used textiles
from developed countries as a donation to those third world
countries. This recycling practise is encouraged because it helps
to reduce unwanted waste while providing clothings to the needies.
Damaged textiles are further sorted into grades to make industrial
wiping cloths and for use in paper manufacture or material suitable
for fibre reclamation and filling products. If textile reprocessors
receive wet or soiled clothes however, these may still be disposed
of in a landfill, as the washing and drying facilities are not
present at sorting units.
Fibre reclamation mills sort textiles according
to fibre type and colour. Colour sorting eliminates the need to
re-dye the recycled textiles. The textiles are shredded into
"shoddy" fibres and blended with other selected fibres, depending
on the intended end use of the recycled yarn. The blended mixture
is carded to clean and mix the fibres and spun ready for weaving or
knitting. The fibres can also be compressed for mattress
production. Textiles sent to the flocking industry are shredded to
make filling material for car insulation, roofing felts,
loudspeaker cones, panel linings and furniture padding.
Timber
Recycling timber has become popular due to its image as an environmentally friendly product, with consumers commonly believing that by purchasing recycled wood the demand for green timber will fall and ultimately benefit the environment. Greenpeace also view recycled timber as an environmentally friendly product, citing it as the most preferable timber source on their website. The arrival of recycled timber as a construction product has been important in both raising industry and consumer awareness towards deforestation and promoting timber mills to adopt more environmentally friendly practices.Wood recycling is a subject which has in recent
years taken an ever greater role in our lives. The problem,
however, is that although many local authorities like the idea of
recycling, they do not fully support it. One of the countless
examples, which has been in the news is the concept of actually
recycling wood which is growing in the cities. Namely, recycling
timber, trees and other sources.
Other Techniques
Several other materials are also commonly recycled, frequently at an industrial level.Ship
breaking is one example that has associated environmental,
health, and safety risks for the area where the operation takes
place; balancing all these considerations is an environmental
justice problem.
Tire
recycling is also common. Used tires can be added to asphalt for producing road
surfaces or to make rubber mulch
used on playgrounds for safety.
Sustainable design
Much of the difficulty inherent in recycling
comes from the fact that most products are not designed with
recycling in mind. The concept of sustainable
design aims to solve this problem, and was first laid out in
the book "Cradle
to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things" by architect William McDonough
and chemist Michael
Braungart. They suggest that every product (and all packaging they
require) should have a complete "closed-loop" cycle mapped out for
each component—a way in which every component will either return to
the natural ecosystem through biodegradation or be
recycled indefinitely.
See also
- Full Depth Recycling
- Ship-Submarine recycling program
- Thermal depolymerization
- Chemical reclamation, for example hydrochloric acid regeneration
References
recycled in Arabic: استرجاع النفايات
recycled in Catalan: Reciclatge
recycled in Czech: Recyklace
recycled in Danish: Genbrug
recycled in German: Recycling
recycled in Modern Greek (1453-):
Ανακύκλωση
recycled in Spanish: Reciclaje
recycled in Esperanto: Recikligo
recycled in Persian: بازیافت
recycled in French: Recyclage
recycled in Croatian: Recikliranje
recycled in Indonesian: Daur ulang
recycled in Icelandic: Endurvinnsla
recycled in Italian: Riciclaggio dei
rifiuti
recycled in Hebrew: מיחזור
recycled in Latin: Anacyclismus
recycled in Hungarian: Újrahasznosítás
recycled in Dutch: Hergebruik
recycled in Japanese: リサイクル
recycled in Norwegian: Resirkulering
recycled in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Resirkulering
recycled in Narom: Èrcycliéthie
recycled in Occitan (post 1500):
Reciclatge
recycled in Polish: Recykling
recycled in Portuguese: Reciclagem
recycled in Russian: Переработка отходов
recycled in Simple English: Recycling
recycled in Slovak: Recyklácia
recycled in Slovenian: Recikliranje
recycled in Serbian: Recikliranje
recycled in Serbo-Croatian: Recikliranje
recycled in Finnish: Kierrätys
recycled in Swedish: Återvinning
recycled in Thai: รีไซเคิล
recycled in Turkish: Geri dönüşüm
recycled in Chinese: 資源回收再利用