IS RECYCLING COST EFFECTIVE? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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IS RECYCLING COST EFFECTIVE?

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"Recycling our waste, be it on a small scale in the home or office or on a large scale like the nation’s landfills will potentially cut millions of dollars a year – millions of dollars that can be put into other important programs. Is recycling cost-effective? It saves tax money and has potential to pay you for your old electronics and junk. From analysis, it would seem so. This is from an article that appeared on All Green Website: " – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IS RECYCLING COST EFFECTIVE?


1
IS RECYCLING COST EFFECTIVE?
2
  • In elementary school, you may have heard the
    phrase Reduce, reuse, recycle. With current
    rates of sustainability, this phrase may become
    more relevant than chanting the phrase in a third
    year classroom. As a reminder, recycling is the
    process of changing a used product into one or
    more usable products. This is usually done by
    melting down or grinding up the original
    product and re-purposing it. Recycling isnt just
    a boost for the environment, though it can be
    beneficial to your pockets, as well.
  • Humankind has been recycling for much of its time
    here. It has been a practice since at least 400
    BC. During WWI and WWII, recycling was
    cost-effective even then as it made new equipment
    for the war. However, manufacturing has gotten
    much more efficient over the last 50 years, so
    the question arises is recycling cost-effective?

3
Recycling Creates Jobs
Recycling creates more jobs than landfill sites.
According to the U.S. Recycling Economic
Informational Study, over 50,000 recycling plants
have created over a million jobs in the United
States. In a time where the amount of jobs is
limited, this is a priceless resource all on its
own. For comparison, the United States
Environmental Protection Agencys studies have
concluded that for every 10,000 tons of waste
dumped into a landfill, one job is created.
However, for the same amount of waste going to a
recycling plant creates 10 jobs specifically
recycling, or 75 jobs pertaining to material
reuse. The Green Economy Survey for California
states that recycling jobs create a substantial
27 of the 433,000 green economy jobs in the
state. These jobs are held by a wide demographic,
including retirees, veterans, and military
personnel.
4
Recycling Lowers Landfill Costs
  • Additionally, recycling cuts landfill costs.
    Building a new landfill incurs several costs
    between 500,000 to 1,000,000 for the design and
    engineering alone. The lining what keeps waste
    from seeping into the ground and contaminating it
    will cost about 75,000 per acre. This money
    comes from tax funds, meaning that taxpayers are
    the ones who fund these expensive facilities.
    Even if no new landfills were made, it still
    costs millions of dollars per year to run. A
    solution to this has actually been implemented in
    Sweden for the last decade burn landfill waste
    for energy. This has proven so effective that
    Sweden is looking to import trash from other
    countries because they have little left to burn.
    This saves money in two departments, both energy
    and waste.

5
E-Recycling Lowers Manufacturing Costs
  • One very important method of recycling that many
    people overlook is e-recycling. E-recycling is
    the specific recycling of things like old cell
    phones, CDs, floppy discs, old cables and cords,
    and much more. Considering how fast our
    technology is growing, older devices can become
    obsolete within a year. So what to do with them?
    Some store these older devices to use as a
    backup, some trade their old devices for new
    ones, and some simply throw them away. According
    to Duke University, e-recycling costs are a
    fraction of those incurred simply disposing the
    material. This makes recycling very
    cost-effective for many businesses, making it
    more attractive to upgrade outdated, slower
    machines.
  • Another form of recycling that is often
    overlooked is scrap. For example, at the time of
    this writing, on average aluminum cans can be
    traded in for 0.35 per pound. For anything above
    100 pounds, this comes up to 0.35 Aluminum wire
    sells for between 0.26 to 0.58. Old automobile
    batteries can be sold for 7, and many other
    metals such as lead, copper, brass and iron sell
    for 1 a pound and up.
  • In short, recycling our waste, be it on a small
    scale in the home or office or on a large scale
    like the nations landfills will potentially cut
    millions of dollars a year millions of dollars
    that can be put into other important programs. Is
    recycling cost-effective? It saves tax money and
    has potential to pay you for your old electronics
    and junk. From analysis, it would seem so.

6
Questions? Comments?
  • We are happy to help you!
  • Website http//www.allgreenrecycling.com
  • All Green Recycling
  • info_at_allgreenrecycling.com
  • (800) 780-0347 
  •  
  • Source
  • http//dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/handle/10161/
    296 (pdf)
  • http//www.epa.gov/region9/newsletter/feb2011/gree
    njobs.html
  • http//dnr.mo.gov/env/swmp/pubs-reports/rececon.ht
    m
  • https//en.wikipedia.org/?titleRecyclingCost.E2.
    80.93benefit_analysis
  • http//www.allgreenrecycling.com/blog/is-recycling
    -cost-effective/
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