Saturday, November 10, 2012

Where does your recycling go?

First off what exactly is recycling?  There are lots of sophisticated, scientific defintitions out there, but personally, I like the way it's described by http://science.howstuffworks.com: taking something that isn't useful anymore and making it into something new instead of just throwing it away.  This includes repurposing materials, by making your trash into crafts, reusing plastic grocery bags to carry anything and everything, and yardsaling old clothes as well as putting all your paper, plastics, and cans in the big blue bin once a week. 

But as for the actual recycling process...

1.  First, after you put your recylables out on the curb, your trash collection service will come pick them up and sell them to a Materials Recovery Facility.  Here the items are sorted by material through a variety of means.  I have some basics of the MRF process here, but for a better, more detailed description watch the video at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7CFE5tD1CCI
  • heavier plastics, glass, and metals are separated from the lighter paper products by gravity
  • metals are separated using strong magnets
  • plastics and glass are separated by weight
  • glass is sorted by color and broken into pieces, called "cullet"
  • plastics are sorted by scanners, which separate them based on type and color
  • often in between steps, human workers mechanically separate out materials the machines might have missed
2.  The isolated materials are baled and sold to outside companies who make return them to their base material (plastics are ground into flakes and then pellets, then melted down to form plain plastic) and made into new materials.

3.  Some of these materials are down-cycled, meaning they are remade into weaker or less valuable materials.  For example, paper is made of tree fibers, and after being ground up for recycling, these fibers are shorter, and the resulting recycled paper is weaker and of a lower quality than the original product.  Eventually, the paper reaches a point where it can no longer be recycled and is sent to the landfill.  This is why it's so imported to reduce and reuse before you put something out for recycling.


 4.  To find out more information about what happens to specific materials after beign collected, visit:  http://pages.uoregon.edu/recycle/after_collection.html
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

America Recycles Day!

Next Thursday, November 15th is America Recycles Day!!!!  The event is, in the words of the Loudoun Times-Mirror newspaper magazine, "designed to raise public awareness of the economic, environmental, and public health benefits associated with recycling." 



For more details you can visit americarecyclesday.org.
To find out more about recycling opportunities near us, visit loudoun.gov/recycle or call 703-777-0187.