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Reduces greenhouse gas emissions by requiring significantly less energy to
manufacture products from recyclable than virgin ore and by avoiding landfilling.
Energy saved using recycled materials vs. virgin ore is up to:
- 92% for aluminum
- 90% for copper
- 87% for plastic
- 68% for paper
- 56% for steel
- 34% for glass
Conserves natural resources. Recycling one ton of:
- Paper saves 17 trees, 79 gallons of oil, 7000 gallons of water, and 3.3
cubic yards of landfill.
- Steel conserves 2500 lbs. of iron ore, 1400 lbs. of coal and 120 lbs.
of limestone.
- Aluminum conserves up to 8 tons bauxite ore and 14 megawatt hours of
electricity.
Cleaner air and water from safely removing potentially hazardous materials and
keeping them out of landfills.
- Mercury switches removed from older automobiles.
- Lead recovered from computer monitors.
- Various harmful chemicals safely recycled from electronics.
Environmental Recycling Benefits and Facts
- Recycling and composting diverted nearly 70 million tons of material away from
landfills and incinerators in 2000, up from 34 million tons in 1990-doubling in
just 10 years.
- Every ton of paper that is recycled saves 17 trees.
The energy we save when we recycle one glass bottle is enough to light a light
bulb for four hours.
- Recycling benefits the air and water by creating a net reduction in ten major
categories of air pollutants and eight major categories of water pollutants.
- In the U.S., processing minerals contributes almost half of all reported toxic
emissions from industry, sending 1.5 million tons of pollution into the air and
water each year. Recycling can significantly reduce these emissions.
- It is important to reduce our reliance on foreign oil. Recycling helps us do that
by saving energy.
- Manufacturing with recycled materials, with very few exceptions, saves energy
and water and produces less air and water pollution than manufacturing with
virgin materials.
- It takes 95% less energy to recycle aluminum than it does to make it from raw materials.
Making recycled steel saves 60%, recycled newspaper 40%, recycled plastics 70%,
and recycled glass 40%. These savings far outweigh the energy created as by-products
of incineration and landfilling.
- In 2000, recycling resulted in an annual energy savings equal to the amount of
energy used in 6 million homes (over 660 trillion BTUs).
- In 2005, recycling is conservatively projected to save the amount of energy used in
9 million homes (900 trillion BTUs).
- A national recycling rate of 30% reduces greenhouse gas emissions as much as removing
nearly 25 million cars from the road.
- Recycling conserves natural resources, such as timber, water, and minerals.
- Every bit of recycling makes a difference. For example, one year of recycling on just
one college campus, Stanford University, saved the equivalent of 33,913 trees and
the need for 636 tons of iron ore, coal, and limestone.
- Recycled paper supplies more than 37% of the raw materials used to make new paper
products in the U.S. Without recycling, this material would come from trees.
- Every ton of newsprint or mixed paper recycled is the equivalent of 12 trees.
- Every ton of office paper recycled is the equivalent of 24 trees.
- When one ton of steel is recycled, 2,500 pounds of iron ore, 1,400 pounds of coal
and 120 pounds of limestone are conserved.
- Brutal wars over natural resources, including timber and minerals, have killed or
displaced more than 20 million people and are raising at least $12 billion a year
for rebels, warlords, and repressive governments. Recycling eases the demand for the resources.
- Mining is the world's most deadly occupation. On average, 40 mine workers are killed on
the job each day, and many more are injured. Recycling reduces the need for mining.
- Tree farms and reclaimed mines are not ecologically equivalent to natural forests
and ecosystems. Recycling prevents habitat destruction, loss of biodiversity, and
soil erosion associated with logging and mining.*
*http://www.isra.org/
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