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posted by martyb on Sunday March 10 2019, @08:37PM   Printer-friendly
from the Betteridge-Says:-Reduce,-Reuse,-and-THEN-Recycle dept.

Is This the End of Recycling?

For decades, we were sending the bulk of our recycling to China—tons and tons of it, sent over on ships to be made into goods such as shoes and bags and new plastic products. But last year, the country restricted imports of certain recyclables, including mixed paper—magazines, office paper, junk mail—and most plastics. Waste-management companies across the country are telling towns, cities, and counties that there is no longer a market for their recycling. These municipalities have two choices: pay much higher rates to get rid of recycling, or throw it all away.

Most are choosing the latter. "We are doing our best to be environmentally responsible, but we can't afford it," said Judie Milner, the city manager of Franklin, New Hampshire. Since 2010, Franklin has offered curbside recycling and encouraged residents to put paper, metal, and plastic in their green bins. When the program launched, Franklin could break even on recycling by selling it for $6 a ton. Now, Milner told me, the transfer station is charging the town $125 a ton to recycle, or $68 a ton to incinerate. One-fifth of Franklin's residents live below the poverty line, and the city government didn't want to ask them to pay more to recycle, so all those carefully sorted bottles and cans are being burned. Milner hates knowing that Franklin is releasing toxins into the environment, but there's not much she can do. "Plastic is just not one of the things we have a market for," she said.

The same thing is happening across the country. Broadway, Virginia, had a recycling program for 22 years, but recently suspended it after Waste Management told the town that prices would increase by 63 percent, and then stopped offering recycling pickup as a service. "It almost feels illegal, to throw plastic bottles away," the town manager, Kyle O'Brien, told me.

Without a market for mixed paper, bales of the stuff started to pile up in Blaine County, Idaho; the county eventually stopped collecting it and took the 35 bales it had hoped to recycle to a landfill. The town of Fort Edward, New York, suspended its recycling program in July and admitted it had actually been taking recycling to an incinerator for months. Determined to hold out until the market turns around, the nonprofit Keep Northern Illinois Beautiful has collected 400,000 tons of plastic. But for now, it is piling the bales behind the facility where it collects plastic.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by PiMuNu on Monday March 11 2019, @11:29AM (1 child)

    by PiMuNu (3823) on Monday March 11 2019, @11:29AM (#812621)

    In the UK (maybe in US as well) there is a great source of "charity shops", which are essentially junk shops for old books, games, dvds, clothes. Give a donation to charity, take away something second hand, donate your stuff and they sell it to the next person. Freecycle [freecycle.org] is also a thing.

    We also don't spend much on kids toys - they are quite fine with one "new thing" at christmas/birthday and then a whole pile of second hand stuff, they usually prefer the second hand stuff!

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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Phoenix666 on Monday March 11 2019, @01:40PM

    by Phoenix666 (552) on Monday March 11 2019, @01:40PM (#812663) Journal

    Kids don't mind getting toys second-hand if there's no social judgement attached to it. We armored them against that by instilling a sense of, "woo-hoo i got this for FREE!"

    --
    Washington DC delenda est.