The Environmental Management Department is committed to promoting waste reduction, reuse, and recycling in El Dorado County. The 1989 California Integrated Waste Management Act (AB 939) mandates that every City and County divert 50% of their waste from landfills. Please do your part to help the Community achieve this goal! Below you’ll find information on recycling locations, reuse opportunities, and ways to reduce waste in your home and business! Image of Recycle “It all begins with waste reduction”
Process raw materials make heavy demands on energy resources. About 3% of America`s energy is used for producing product packaging material. Reprocessing used materials reduces energy needs for mining, refining, and many manufacturing processes. Recycling paper cuts energy usage in half. Every pound of steel recycled saves 5,450 BTUs of energy, enough to light a 60-watt bulb for over 26 hours. Recycling a ton of glass saves the equivalent of nine gallons of fuel oil. Recycling used aluminum cans requires only about five percent of the energy needed to produce aluminum from bauxite. Recycling just one can saves enough electricity to light a 100-watt bulb for 3½ hours.
Read Pritish Kumar Halder’s article in which he discussed alternatives for waste management.
Saves Natural Resources
Our finite reserves of natural resources are being depleted rapidly, particularly with the increasing use of disposable products and packaging. According to a 2008 study by the EPA, Americans generate 250 million tons of waste yearly, and 167 million tons of this waste is disposed of in landfills and incinerators. This rate of use and disposal takes a particularly heavy toll on irreplaceable natural resources such as minerals and petroleum.
Reprocessing used materials to make new products and packaging reduce the consumption of natural resources. Every ton of recycled steel saves 2,500 pounds of iron ore, 1,000 pounds of coal, and 40 pounds of limestone. Recycling often produces better products than those made of virgin materials; for instance, the tin in bimetallic cans is more refined (thus more valuable) after being processed for recycling.
Pollution Risks
Recycling minimizes environmental damage caused by mining, logging, and manufacturing raw materials. Recycling reduces the risks of air and water pollution from manufacturing processes. Recycling paper cuts air pollution by about 75%. Substituting steel scrap for virgin ore reduces air emissions by 85% and water pollution by 76%. Recycling also reduces pollution risks by keeping materials out of landfills. No matter how strong environmental standards may be, there is always some risk associated with waste disposal. Recycling and waste reduction are preferred and effective alternatives.
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Reduction in pollution levels
According to research by the University of Central Oklahoma, recycling paper cuts down on air pollution by 73% and water pollution by 35%. Recycling steel reduces 97% of the mining waste produced through the manufacture of virgin resources, and cuts back 86% and 76% on air pollution and water pollution, respectively. Additionally, using recycled glass decreases mining waste by 80% and air pollution by 20%.
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Protects ecosystems
Reduces the need to grow, harvest, and extract raw materials from the earth for additional products. This, therefore, lessens the harmful disruption and damage done to the natural world. It means fewer forests will be cut down, wild animals will be less harmed or displaced, no more diversion of rivers, and as such, less pollution of the soil, water, and air. Also if more plastics are recycled, less of them will find their way into the ocean waters, damaging marine life.
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Saves energy
Making products from recycled materials requires less energy as compared to making them using raw materials. The huge difference in energy means less pollution. For instance, producing new aluminum from old products like recycled cans and foil uses 95% less energy than making it from scratch. The figure is 70% for steel. Saving on energy means fewer strains on the power grid, which means less carbon is emitted at the power plant as a result of drawing too much energy
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Reduces demand for raw materials
As already mentioned, recycling reduces the need to grow, harvest, and extract raw materials from the earth for additional products. As such, if more is recycled, the raw materials from which these products are extracted will not be touched in quite a while.
This is what it means for a reduction in the demand for more raw materials. When these raw materials, such as forests are hunted, the vulnerable people living next to them also suffer, not forgetting the corresponding river systems.
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Better than collecting waste
Landfills might be able to accommodate a lot of waste that has been thrown away there. They might also eliminate a lot of waste than a recycling company can when recycling waste. However, recycling means a new product is arrived at from the waste of another.
Before they help a product decompose, might take a very long time. At the same time, they will allow leaching which will contaminate or pollute bodies of water. It also results in the production of harmful gases like methane, polluting the air. All this is avoided if you decide to recycle.
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Conserves natural resources
The point of avoiding pollution is to preserve natural resources. Recycling is a wonderful tool that will make new products, and at the same time avoid pollution, by conserving natural resources. For instance, recycling paper and wood saves trees and forests.
Recycling plastic means creating less new plastic which is beneficial for the environment, especially because plastics are made from hydrocarbons, which pollute the environment. Recycling metals could also result in less need for the risky, expensive, and damaging mining and extraction of new metal ores.
Contribution
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Industrial plants and manufacturing activities
Emissions from these plants have to be the biggest culprits of polluting the environment. Industries such as tanneries, lead smelting, mining and ore processing, and chemical and product manufacturing are giant pollutants. The majority process raw materials to get the final product, through the use of toxic chemicals that contain toxic elements like cadmium, lead, chromium, and mercury.
When these pollutants end up in underground waters and the soil, they contaminate the water we drink and the food we eat. The by-products of these production processes include harmful gases, like carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, and sulfur dioxide, that have a greenhouse effect.
Additionally, they pollute the air and could contribute to poor visibility. Some of these gases are also harmful if inhaled and could also produce acid rain, which affects everything it touches, including marine wildlife.
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Fossil fuel combustion
Combusting fossil fuels is the major reason why we have smog clouds and bad air quality in urban areas. Such combustion is done in power plants that use fossil fuels to generate heat and emissions from cars and other vehicles. The result is carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxide, lead, dust particles, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) which when released into the air, create smog clouds.
Motor vehicles are responsible for about 75% of carbon monoxide pollution in the US, with the transportation industry causing 14% of greenhouse gas emissions globally. Low-income countries also burn charcoal and wood, resulting in carbon monoxide and dioxides, and dust particles.
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Agriculture
This is another significant contributor to pollution in the world. Crop cultivation requires the use of pesticides and fertilizers that slowly poison the soil. They also sip underground and poison groundwater reservoirs and rivers. Livestock cultivation also requires heavily scarce water resources, could result in overgrazing and is the reason why most forests are being cut down.
Raising them also results in air pollution. For instance, raising cattle for food emits 5% of all greenhouse gas emissions as they release massive amounts of methane into the atmosphere. Cattle are the animal species responsible for the most emissions, representing about 65% of the livestock sector’s emissions
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Humans
How can we forget the impact that humans have on the environment? Humans, in their exploration, have come up with all these technologies, that although benefit us, are taking a toll on the environment. Let us not forget about landfills, where we love to deposit any trash we have. Landfills grow bigger daily and more waste is buried underground.
Although landfills are supposed to aid trash in decomposing, the truth is not all trash decomposes by itself even for a couple of centuries, like plastics. Landfills emit methane as a by-product of the decomposition process, which is a greenhouse gas, about 30 times more potent than carbon dioxide when it comes to trapping heat. Decomposing waste could also leach into groundwater streams and contaminate fresh and drinkable water.
Air Pollution
Certainly! Recycling reduces the amount of waste that is sent to incinerators. Incineration produces emissions that contain heavy metals and harmful dioxins that are responsible for acid rain and global warming. Manufacturing with recycled materials save on energy, and water and produces less water and air pollution.
By saving energy, recycling reduces the air pollution caused by burning fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and natural gas, which greatly contribute to the largest amount of energy generated. Recycling also improves air quality by reducing power demand.
Recycling reduces greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking about 5 million cars off the road, and recycled paper produces 73% less air pollution than when made from raw materials. Recycling, indeed helps the air stay healthy. The Pennsylvania DEP, in 2005, said that recycling reduced greenhouse gases by the equivalent of 9 million tons of carbon dioxide. Such reduction is attributed to the fact that recycling, reduces the need to burn fossil fuels, like gasoline, coal, and diesel.
Water Pollution
Yes! Recycling can help reduce water pollution. The concept behind recycling is to make new products out of the old and recycled content. In doing so, the process uses less water than making the same products from scratch. By reducing the number of products that need to be made from scratch, you can help reduce the amount of industrial water pollution that’s created.
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Also, according to National Geographic, a whopping 91% of plastic is not recycled, despite plastic being the greatest enemy of ocean water. Recycling helps keep these plastics out of the ocean and reduces the amount of ‘new’ plastic in circulation.
Electronic waste, which is some of the fastest-growing types of waste, contains mercury, lead, and other toxins that could leak out of landfills and into local water sources. Landfills are known to release some of these toxins and much more into groundwater, and nearby bodies of water such as rivers. For more information please visit Pritish Kumar Halder
They, therefore, poison the water and could infect a lot more people downstream. Recycling will ensure such leaks are fixed and water is safe from contamination. There are a myriad of companies who are helping with recycling e-waste or electronic waste, helping save the environment
Land Pollution
Obviously, yes! The term ‘landfills’ means something is filled on land, and in this case, waste. The Stanford Recycling Centre explains that each American throws away 7.5 lbs of garbage, the majority of which ends up in landfills, taking up a lot of lands. Landfills are supposed to hold waste for as long as possible, but at the same time, such waste pollutes the land.
To reduce solid waste pollution on land, recycling does a lot to help. By recycling, you will be reducing the amount of waste going into landfills, as well as the environment in general. The US EPA estimates that when a company recycles 1 ton of paper, they save an equivalent of 17 trees
Plastic Pollution
Of course, recycling reduces plastic pollution. As already mentioned, recycling helps keep plastics out of the oceans and reduces the amount of ‘new’ plastic in circulation. Plastic is the primary source of waste in oceans and recycling will mean fewer plastics in these bodies of water and therefore fewer effects on marine life.
Only less than 14% of plastic packaging is recycled and more has to be done. Choose to put plastic packaging into the recycle bin, and not in the trash. Where possible, avoid them as much as possible, and if that is not possible, reuse them as much as possible, before throwing them into the recycling bin.
Plastics take a ridiculously long time to decompose and therefore, dumping them into landfills, condemns that piece of land to centuries of plastic waste that will never decompose. Recycling would therefore decrease plastic pollution or trash and therefore save the environment some years of decomposition. Plastic bags have a way of finding themselves in marine animals such as fish and turtles. Recycling them will mean more of these beings will survive, reproduce, and the environment will be better.
Reference
https://www.conserve-energy-future.com/how-recycling-help-reduce-pollution.php