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Rigorous Recycling
Christian Science Monitor ^ | 12/27/02 | CSMonitor Staff

Posted on 12/27/2002 7:23:27 PM PST by technochick99

It's uncanny how many Americans apparently aren't making sure aluminum cans go into a recycling bin instead of a trash can. If you ask them, though, as a recent poll did, they'll say they're doing more recycling, when in fact, they're doing less.

Some 50.7 billion aluminum cans were tossed last year instead of being recycled, according to the Container Recycling Institute. And the Aluminum Association says recycling of aluminum will dip below 50 percent this year, a rate not seen since 1986.

More disturbing is the fact that aluminum-can recycling is a bellwether for other kinds of recycling, such as glass, plastic, and paper. That's mostly because it's valuable, easy, and cheap to reuse.

Have Americans simply become lazy recyclers? Or are there are other factors in play?

Just 10 states have beverage recycling programs. And rising costs, along with lower consumer interest in recycling, are forcing cities to reconsider their curbside recycling programs.

Indeed, the business bottom line may be just as much at fault as what does or doesn't end up in the bottom of a recycling bin. So much aluminum has been recycled that, along with thinner cans, aluminum scrap just isn't commanding a high price these days.

But does no financial incentive mean no recycling at all? New York City even stopped recycling glass and plastic last summer. While recycling businesses obviously need to turn a profit to stay viable, does it have to be a substantial one?

Rising landfill costs may once again raise the prices, and incentives, for businesses to recycle more goods. Citizens willing to pay a little more for garbage pickup could also help revive flagging recycling efforts.


TOPICS: Government
KEYWORDS: recycling
I recycle quite a bit, but once in awhile, can't help but think that they take it away in the truck, and then toss it in with all of the other garbage...
1 posted on 12/27/2002 7:23:27 PM PST by technochick99
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To: technochick99
Call it what you will, but a old sugar coated coke can buzzing with bees and flys in the hot summer sun,is still trash.

Bill
2 posted on 12/27/2002 7:26:30 PM PST by njmaugbill
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To: technochick99
The whole recycling system is not efficient. All trash should be sorted for channeling to appropriate end-points. It's a pain to sort for curbside pickup and too much is arbitrary. Process the entire trash stream. Why hasn't that technology been developed? Doing so has to fly or forget it. That's the message from consumers.
3 posted on 12/27/2002 7:44:25 PM PST by toddst
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To: technochick99
Our Widespread Faith In Recycling Is Misplaced by Doug Bandow

Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute.

The Earth. It's hard not to like it. Many people adore it. Indeed, there has long been a strand of environmentalism that treats nature as divine. So-called Deep Ecologists, for instance, term their "eco-terrorist" attacks acts of worship to the planet. Few Americans would go so far, of course, but many of them worship in their own way. They recycle.

A decade ago a wandering garbage barge set off a political crisis: Where will we put our trash? The media inflamed people's fears of mounting piles of garbage. A variety of interest groups - particularly "public relations consultants, environmental organizations, waste-handling corporations," according to journalist John Tierney - lobbied to line their pockets. Politicians seeking to win votes enacted a spate of laws and regulations to encourage and often mandate recycling.

But while politics did help create an industry, it did not generate the moral fervor behind it. Many people see recycling as their way to help preserve the planet. For some, it may be the environmental equivalent of serving time in Purgatory, attempting to atone for the materialist excesses of a consumer society. It allows one to feel good about oneself even while enjoying every modern convenience.

This moral fervor comes at a price. A new study from the Reason Foundation, "Packaging, Recycling, and Solid Waste," concludes that recycling, though sometimes beneficial, all too often wastes resources. But then, it has long been known that most trash isn't worth reusing, recycling programs usually lose money, and landfills offer a safe disposal method.

Indeed, a year ago John Tierney wrote a devastating article for The New York Times Magazine titled "Recyling is Garbage." He declared that the emperor had no clothes: "Recycling may be the most wasteful activity in modern America: a waste of time and money, a waste of human and natural resources."

His points were many. For instance, packaging saves resources, reducing food spoilage. Fast-food meals generate less trash per person than do home-cooked meals. The cheapest way to dispose of garbage is in a landfill. Modern dumps incorporate a range of safeguards and take up a minuscule amount of space.

A. Clark Wiseman of Spokane's Gonzaga University figures that, at the current rate, Americans could put all of the trash generated over the next 1,000 years into a landfill 100 yards high and 35 miles square. Or dig a similar-size hole and plant grass on top after it was filled.

Recycling, in contrast, costs money. New York City's mandatory program spends $200 more per ton to collect recyclables than it would cost to bury them, and another $40 per ton to pay a company to process them. Tierney figures the value of the private labor wasted complying with the rules (rinsing, taking off labels, sorting) to be literally hundreds of dollars more per ton.

Yet there is no environmental reason to recycle trash. Resources are not scarce. In fact, much newsprint comes from trees grown for that specific purpose. Even Worldwatch, a reliably hysterical group that has constantly (though luckily, so far inaccurately) predicted impending environmental doom, now acknowledges: "The question of scarcity may never have been the most important one."

Moreover, making recyclables generates waste. For instance, producing paperboard burger containers yields more air and water pollution and consumes more energy than does manufacturing polystyrene clamshells. It takes more water to recycle newsprint than to make it afresh.

How can such a wasteful practice persist? Tierney concluded: "By turning garbage into a political issue, environmentalists have created jobs for themselves as lawyers, lobbyists, researchers, educators and moral guardians. Environmentalists may genuinely believe they're helping the Earth, but they have been hurting the common good while profiting personally."

Tierney's article infuriated environmentalists, but was ignored by business, which is paying much of the cost of the recycling liturgy. Only silence emanated from companies that have the most to gain from returning garbage to the marketplace.

Yet inaction is a prescription for more regulation. The federal government is considering increasing its national objective for recycling from 25 percent to 35 percent, 41 states already impose some form of goal or mandate regarding trash reduction and recycling, and some jurisdictions are considering new laws, such as so-called advance disposal fees. Politicians who care little about facts and feel political pressure only from environmentalists are likely to add new rules and toughen existing ones.

If people want to worship the Earth by recycling, they are certainly free to do so. But the government shouldn't dragoon skeptics into the same wasteful ceremonies. It is time for an environmental reformation, in which lawmakers change public policy to reflect the wastefulness of recycling.

Distributed by Copley News Service

http://www.cato.org/dailys/8-27-97.html

more:

http://www.ncpa.org/ea/eaja94/eaja94i.html

There is a ton of stuff out there on that holy sacrament of the left known as "recycling." Conservatives should know the truth.

4 posted on 12/27/2002 8:30:16 PM PST by gg188
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To: njmaugbill
I thought this was going to be about other types of garbage. I'm at a loss to describe Frank Lautenburg. Then, there are
the bad pennies that just won't go away - Bill, Jimmy, Patsy, the smartest man in the world, and Ma Richards.
5 posted on 12/27/2002 8:47:31 PM PST by Calvin Locke
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To: technochick99
My company says my time is worth $200/hour.

I am NOT A JANITOR.

Therefore I do not recycle.

Period.

--Boris

6 posted on 12/27/2002 8:50:27 PM PST by boris
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To: technochick99
can't help but think that they take it away in the truck, and then toss it in with all of the other garbage...

I think the same thing,

7 posted on 12/27/2002 8:52:59 PM PST by eddie willers
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To: gg188
I printed this article from the Cato site at http://www.cato.org/dailys/8-27-97.html and am sending it to school with my 5th grade grandaughter when school starts again after New Years.1 Recycling is embedded into every course of study she has, except music, as far as I can tell.

1. Actually, we shouldn't celebrate New Years on Jan 1, because other faiths and ethnic groups don't recognize Jan 1 as the beginning of the new year, and may find our holiday offensive.

8 posted on 12/27/2002 9:07:54 PM PST by StopGlobalWhining
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To: StopGlobalWhining
That is so right! The three "r's" are no longer reading, 'ritin and 'rithmatic. One is "recycling."

And otherwise bright kids are now adults had uncritically accept the efficacy and sanctity of recycling, i.e., all recycling=good, no recycling=all bad----without any consideration for external reality (prices of raw materials, cost of recycling, etc.)

In my preppy, yuppie burb, a multi-ton truck, staffed by two government (i.e., lifetime, non-productive) employees chugs through the hoods at 2 or 3 mph, stopping at every driveway to pick up a small container used for collecting milk cartons and soft drink cans. The cost of the gasoline for the truck alone negates any savings of the "recycling", wasting the fossil fuel so precious to the precious left, not to mention polluting the air as the truck's engine idles non-stop for 9 or 10 or more hours daily.

Like I said: recycling is a holy sacrament of the left (along with abortion and a few others we could think of.) And if a politician DARED to question the benefits of recycling (or the lack-thereof), he'd get the treatment from the envirowackos that Lott got from the poverty-pimps/race-quota/race-baiting crowd.

So, recylcing is a holy writ that not only will go unquestioned but certainly in coming years you better not ever even admit that there was a time you DIDN'T recycle! Abortion, homo marriages, recycling---things deemed unquestionable and unassailable by the elitist left.

9 posted on 12/27/2002 9:36:46 PM PST by gg188
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To: StopGlobalWhining
1. Actually, we shouldn't celebrate New Years on Jan 1, because other faiths and ethnic groups don't recognize Jan 1 as the beginning of the new year, and may find our holiday offensive.

Damn! We're the calendar-imperialists, forcing our calendar on the rest of the world. And who SAYS the earth takes 365 days or so to circle the sun, huh? Some dead, white slave-owning racists? I think some mau-maus in New Guinea or somewhere believe a year is 100 days. And really, SHOULDN'T it be? Why not have a METRIC YEAR, in honor of the wonderful people of the third world who have had such great success in the societies they have built while using the metric system. Divide everything by ten. Hours in the days, days in the week, etc.

10 posted on 12/27/2002 9:44:01 PM PST by gg188
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To: StopGlobalWhining
I have stopped recycling. It uses up too much water and it all goes to the burner anyhow. It is just another way for the government to train us and control our behaviors.
11 posted on 12/27/2002 9:53:55 PM PST by mlmr
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