Showing posts with label refuse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label refuse. Show all posts

Tackling the Problem of Plastic Waste on World Oceans Day

June 8 is World Oceans Day an opportunity to reflect on the importance of our oceans as well as solutions to the numerous threats they face. In 2017 the action focus is plastic pollution. Our oceans are indispensable to life of Earth and fate of humanity is intimately tied to their well-being. Our oceans are hotter and more acidic and they are increasingly unable to serve as carbon sinks. Coral reefs are dying and entire aquatic ecosystems are being destroyed. Norwegian billionaire and ocean advocate Kjell Inge Røkke aptly summarized situation when he said, "the oceans are also under greater pressure than ever before from overfishing, coastal pollution, habitat destruction, climate change and ocean acidification, and one of the most pressing challenges of all, plasticization of the ocean. The need for knowledge and solutions is pressing."

Many of these issues are intertwined. For example global warming appears to be contributing to an alarming decline in the amount of dissolved oxygen in the world's ocean. Low ocean oxygen is part of a feedback loop which sees microorganisms produce the greenhouse gas nitrous oxide. These effects could lead to ocean dead zones that are deadly for a number of marine organisms. It could even lead to a complete breakdown of aquatic food chains. These are some of the findings in a large research synthesis conducted by oceanographer Sunke Schmidtko and two colleagues from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, Germany. The research was published in the journal Nature.

Market growth

Plastic (celluloid) was invented by John Wesley Hyatt in 1869, however it was the invention and mass manufacturing of cheap oil based plastic in the 1960s that has led our current crisis. In 1965 we were producing about 15 million tons of plastic each year we now produce more than 300 million tons every year.

The plastic market has averaged 5 percent growth per year since 2000 primarily in packaging. Between 2000 and 2015, plastic used in packaging grew from 17 percent of market share to 25 percent. Plastic is now a $427 billion industry in the US alone. It employs nearly one million American workers and it is the third largest US manufacturing industry. Estimates indicate that if the trend continues by 2050 there will be more plastic in the ocean, by weight, than fish.

Existential threat

Yayat Supriatna, an urban planning scholar who has advised the Indonesian government said, "People don’t understand how dangerous plastic can be." Plastic is toxic and can be deadly. It is estimated that one million seabirds and 100,000 marine mammals and sea turtles become entrapped in plastic or ingest it and die each year. Plastic is already killing millions of creatures and there is mounting evidence to suggest that plastic may be an existential threat to our species.

Plastic has become ubiquitous because it is cheap, lightweight, strong and durable. Its cheapness is due to the fact that we found a way to make it with oil. Its strength and durability are what makes it so dangerous. Plastic bottles in the ocean will not break down for 4 centuries and even then it lives eternally on as "poisonous confetti".

In 2016 a couple of sperm whales washed up on shores of Germany having starved to death due to a belly full of plastic. This is a redux of a whale found dead in the waters off the Greek isle of Mykonos in 2011. Whales are just one of many creatures that are threatened by plastic waste.

As quoted in a PRI investigative piece, oceanographer Curtis Ebbesmeyer, the man who coined the term "gyres" said, plastic pollution, "makes global warming look like child’s play". He suggests that plastic may even threaten the survival of some species including humans.

He explained the pervasive nature of the threat by saying, "We’re all infected with plastic...Molecules from some kid’s plastic bottle, dropped into the ocean in Asia, are winding up in the food Americans eat." This, Ebbesmeyer said could interfere with reproduction in a number of studies including humans.

There has been a marked decline in sperm counts which some have attributed to plastic pollution. This includes the carcinogenic synthetic estrogen imitators contained in Bisphenol A (BPA). Almost everybody has traces of BPA in their bodies. Research suggests that exposure to plastics can even impact the fertility of subsequent generations. Biological scientist, Frederick vom Saal, told Mother Jones magazine, "A poison kills you. A chemical like BPA reprograms your cells and ends up causing a disease in your grandchild that kills him."

Sizable problem

The scope of the problem is mind boggling. There are massive, swirling patches of plastic in our oceans. Some of the gyres hold around 400,000 plastic particles per square kilometre.

We continue to add 8 million tons of plastic to the oceans every year. There are 5.2 trillion bits of plastic in the sea. The problem is growing so fast that in the not too distant future plastic could soon cover half the planet’s surface. In some places there is six times more plastic in the water than plankton. The problem is growing so fast that in the not too distant future plastic could soon cover half the planet’s surface. In some places there is six times more plastic in the water than plankton.

Americans throw out more than 45,000 plastic bottles per minute or 2.5 million plastic bottles per hour. Globally people use roughly one million plastic bags per minute.

Plastic is now everywhere on the planet. Researchers from Australia’s University of Tasmania and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds found 18 tonnes of plastic garbage (239 items per square metre) scattered across a small South Pacific island 5,000 kilometers from the nearest human occupation.

The threats associated with plastics are significant. University of Tasmania researcher Jennifer Lavers said plastic in the oceans could be as great a threat as climate change. "You put carbon dioxide into the atmosphere or plastic in the oceans and both will stick around," she told New Scientist.

According to an aerial survey by inventor Boyan Slat the problem of plastic pollution in our oceans is worse than we thought. The survey of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, collected over 1,000 large pieces of garbage in under 2 hours.

Government action

France has announced that it is banning all plastic bags, plastic utensils, cups, and dishes by 2020. At the end of 2015, US President Barack Obama signed a bill requiring that American manufacturers end the use of microbeads in products by July 1, 2017 and end the sale of products containing microbeads in by July 1, 2018. In June 2016 Canada's federal government decision added plastic microbeads to the Schedule 1 list of toxic substances under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA), enabling the government to regulate and ultimately ban the substance.

Oceans are not being protected as they should. Taking a page from the oil industry the US the plastics industry lobbyists have been successful petitioned government in an effort to minimize regulatory oversight.

The patchwork of laws and agreements, along with uneven enforcement are problematic. We also must deal with the difficult issue of waters outside national jurisdictions. We need more protections, more science and more transparency.

Business

The problem of plastic waste is a business problem that must be solved by business innovation. Western multinationals like Proctor & Gamble and Unilever, Nestle and Coca-Cola produce much of the world's plastic waste. However, thus far too little is being done to address the problem. "The corporations may offer a bit of charity here and there," Yayat says. "But they don’t really help. They’ll say the environment is the government’s responsibility."

There are powerful incentives driving corporate action. The sustainable plastic market was estimated to have reached $142.42 billion in 2015. In a Triple Pundit article about the new plastic economy Leon Kaye makes the point that the business community needs to drive a transition in the plastics industry.

"There is a large consensus that the plastics economy needs a fundamental rethink and redesign," said Rob Opsomer, the New Plastics Economy Lead with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, "and that the New Plastics Economy sets an economically and environmentally attractive direction to make that happen."

The single-use plastics industry contributes anywhere from $80 billion to $120 billion in material value losses annually. Further, as referenced above plastic polutes natural environment. This and other environmental problems associated with single-use plastic cost the global economy at least $40 billion a year.

Innovation

There are a number of innovations from the corporate sector that may help. In 2012 Italian company Bio-on unveiled a bioplastics polymer that is 100 percent biodegradable in water and soil. S.C. Johnson & Son Inc. launched an initiative to help build the infrastructure to eventually make Ziploc packaging bags widely recyclable via curbside recycling programs. Ford has replaced plastic car parts with parts made from carbon dioxide. Craft brewery is now making its six pack holders with an edible and biodegradable alternative made of barley and wheat remnants from the brewing process.

In April of this year, the BBC's Helen Briggs reported on a caterpillar that eats plastic.  Researchers at Cambridge University have discovered a plastic eating moth larvae (Galleria mellonella) that breaks down plastic's chemical bonds. It is hoped that researchers may be able to identify microbes in the caterpillar that could be used to dispose of plastic waste in an environmentally friendly fashion. The research was published in the journal, Current Biology.

Alternatives

We know that plastic is very useful, what we need is an alternative to oil based plastics that are not so environmentally harmful. This is especially important in light of the fact that only 14 percent of plastic is currently being recycled. So in addition to doing a much better job of recycling we need to make biodegradable plastics that do not use oil.

A Trucost sustainability focused life cycle report says that plastics cost $139 billion each year. However, it also suggests that plastic alternatives may be worse for the environment. The American Chemistry Council (ACC) funded report is titled, "Plastics and Sustainability: A Valuation of Environmental Benefits, Costs, and Opportunities for Continuous Improvement." The report drew on natural capital assessments and found the environmental cost of using plastics in consumer goods and packaging to be almost 4 times less than existing alternatives (glass, tin, aluminum and paper). In terms of dollar amounts, the report says that non-plastic alternatives comes with environmental costs of $533 billion annually compared to $139 billion with plastics.

However, there are other potentially viable alternatives. One renewable possibility includes hemp and other fast-growing plants containing cellulose. Companies including IBM, Ford and Dell are working to develop viable alternatives to plastics for use in products and packaging. IBM researchers said they have found a way to create cheaper, biodegradable plastic from plants. This follows a plastics recycling process IBM researchers announced last year.

We also need to be wary of false solutions. For example so called compostable plastics are not quite as helpful as it would seem. As explained by Danny Clark, "compostable plastics don’t breakdown and convert into compost or result in nutrient rich soil as the process and name would lead one to believe." Rather than put carbon into the soil, compostable plastics add CO2 (the most abundant greenhouse gas) to the atmosphere.

Circular economy

If it could be made to be viable the circular economy offers the most hope of reducing plastic waste.  The European Commission announced its Circular Economy Action Plan, which is working towards closing the loop on plastics. At a recent World Economic Forum (WEF)in Davos, the Ellen MacArthur Foundation launched the "New Plastics Economy initiative" with the report, "The New Plastics Economy: Rethinking the future of plastics."

As reported by Environmental Leader, this plastics initiative is designed to increase recycling and reuse as well as increase the use of bioplastics. This initiative enjoys the support of some major companies including Amcor, Unilever, Coca-Cola, Dow Chemical and Mars. The launch followed a report that pointed to $3.5 billion in potential environmental savings.

As reported by Thomas Schueneman, new prizes are inspiring innovation. On May 18th 2017, the Ellen MacArthur Foundation announced a $2 million plastics innovation prize in partnership with the Prince of Wales’s International Sustainability Unit. This initiative includes support from more than 40 organizations, including Core Partners Amcor, Coca-Cola, Danone, Mars, Novamont, PepsiCo, Unilever and Veolia. The two part $1 million Circular Design Challenge invites applicants to rethink how we can get products to people without generating plastic waste.

"Working towards circularity in the way we make, use, and distribute plastic packaging will revolutionize the scale of the human footprint on our planet," said Wendy Schmidt, who has already funded two major XPrize competitions focused on oceans. "The value of keeping materials in the economy is massive compared to the losses we suffer when plastic leaks into the very living systems we depend upon for our survival. The New Plastics Economy Prize is a call for creative design and technical innovation at a critical time."

People making a difference

Norwegian billionaire Kjell Inge Røkke has made a fortune from shipping and offshore drilling. He is building the largest and heaviest yacht in the world. What makes this ship exceptional is the fact that it can extract up to five tons of plastic from the ocean every day. Norway's World Wildlife Fund (WWF), will manage the ship which will also be a floating scientific lab for 60 scientists and 40 crew. The ship called Research Expedition Vessel (REV) is scheduled to be completed in 2020 has a number of ecological features that will minimize its footprint. This includes an energy recovery rudder system, medium speed engines, a direct drive diesel-electric propulsion system with battery package, an exhaust cleaning system, ballast water treatment system, low noise, WWF FSC certified woods, and lighting from LEDs.

Related
Plastic Waste in Our Oceans: Problems and Solutions
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Video: The Perils of Plastic Waste
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Chemical Regulation Including Plastics that is Good for Business and the Environment
Plastics and the Greener Cell Phones
PepsiCo Canada's 100% Recycled EcoGreen Bottle Breakthrough
Ford's Flower Powered Green Plastic Replacement
Best Green Automotive Innovations Include Replacements for Plastics
Recycling is a Business Imperative
Water Scarcity and the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse
Assessing the Value of Our Oceans

The Problem of Food Waste is Being Addressed in France

France has just passed legislation designed to help minimize food waste. Reducing food waste reduces agriculture's environmental impacts including greenhouse gas emissions. Reducing food waste is also an important part of managing world hunger which is destined to worsen as climate change increasingly impacts global food production.

Around 40 percent of the world's land is taken up by food and agriculture and together they produce almost one third of global greenhouse gas emissions. Reducing waste will decrease the amount of food required and by extension reduce some of the adverse environmental impacts associated with agriculture.

Almost one quarter of the food produced is wasted. Such waste occurs at every stage of the food chain. In total we throw out between 30 and 40 percent of our food. In Europe and North America almost one half of food waste occurs at the final consumption phase. The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that we waste 1.3 billion tons of edible food at a cost of $750 billion annually.

American consumers throw away around 20 percent of all the food they buy. The problem of food waste is also a concern in France where the average French person throws out 44 to 66 pounds of food each year. Much of that food (15 lbs) is still in its wrapping

Supermarkets commonly discard food which is still edible. In France supermarket food waste represents around 10 percent of the 7.1 million tons of food wasted annually in the country. Last summer French supermarket chain Intermarche decided to do something about the problem of discarding edible food. They launched a clever campaign to sell what they call "ugly" produce at a 30 percent discount.

Now the French have passed legislation that will forbid grocery stores from throwing away unsold food. Under the new law produce that is still safe to eat must be donated to charity or if it is no longer fit for human consumption it must be given to farmers for use as animal feed or compost.

As of July 2016 large stores in France must sign agreements with charities or face very significant fines amounting to as much as $85,000.

While the French law targeting supermarkets is a good start, there are other even larger sources of food waste. Restaurants waste 15 percent of food but consumers are by far the biggest problem as they waste a staggering 67 percent of the food they purchase.

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Webinar - How to Celebrate America Recycles Day at Work

This webinar will take place on Wednesday, October 22, 3:00 - 4:00 p.m. ET. The final America Recycles Day 2014 webinar, features special guest Chad Obenauf, the Chairperson of Kellogg Company's Go Green team!

There is no better time to tackle recycling in your office than on America Recycles Day.

This webinar will address ways of celebrating America Recycles Day in your workplace. Obenauf, will explore his multi-faceted plans for an engaging, educational, and rewarding America Recycles Day at Kellog.

Click here to register.

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Webinar - Promoting Recycling Behavior: What Works

Recycling @Work Pledge Partners,is holding a webinar titled "Promoting Recycling Behavior: What Works." It will take place on August 20, 2014 from 2:00 pm - 3:15 pm EST. The effectiveness of any recycling program hinges on understanding human behavior, and in many cases, asking individuals to change their behaviors.

This webinar will summarize the findings from behavioral science with regard to effective strategies for encouraging people to recycle, including recommendations for program design and marketing. The webinar will also share results from a survey conducted in partnership with The George Washington University regarding participants' feedback on bin shape, color and signage.

Panelists include Wesley Schultz, Professor, California State University and Monique Turner, Associate Professor, The George Washington University.

Click here to register.

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Infographic - Plastic and the 5 Ocean Gyres

10 Ways to Upcycle Plastic Easter Eggs

Now that Easter is over many are wondering what they can do with those plastic eggs. Instead of downcycling, upcycle those eggs by turning them into something you can use over and over again.

Aside from not buying them in the first place there are a number of ways that they can be upcycled so that they do not end up in landfills where they will take decades to break down. In the process they will leave a toxic residue that is harmful to the soil and water.

Consumers buy tons of non-biodegradable plastic trinkets at Easter most of which ends up in landfills. According to the National Retail Federation shoppers will spend more than $2.1 billion on Easter regalia in 2014.

One of the biggest culprits are plastic Easter eggs. While many areas recycle plastic eggs, this type of downcycling has its limits as each time these eggs are recycled the quality of the plastic deteriorates and eventually they become impossible to recycle and they end up in a landfill.

Thankfully, the folks at Planet Pals and inhabitots have come up with some creative ways to put those plastic eggs to use. Here are ten ways you can keep them out of landfills.

1. Put them away for use next year.
2. Soap molds
3. Recepticles to store play dough
4. Clear plastic eggs can be made into mini terrariums
5. Tealight holders
6. Decorative wreaths
7. Toy snake
8. Mini seed starters
9. Toy egg groceries
10. Bath toys

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Event - Waste Management and recycling Summit 2014

Waste Management and recycling Summit 2014 will take place on April 23 - 24, 2014 at the Novotel Riyadh Al Anoud, Al Anoud Tower No.1, 9033, King Fahd Road, Olaya, Saudi Arabia.

This event will forward and highlight the future opportunities in this sector, Capture the most effective and latest technologies Focused on investments and ROI in Waste Management and bring in the industry Experts & Solution Providers from across the globe to share their expertise to make this initiative a bench mark in WM sector.

“Saudi Arabia is pursuing investments and reforms which will redefine its position as one of the world’s most competitive economies by 2020” –

Saudi Arabia’s generates more than 15 million tons of Solid Waste per year with a population of around 29 million, giving an indication of enormity of the problems faced by Civic authorities.

Saudi’s recycling rate ranges from 10-15%, mainly due to the presence of the informal sector which extracts paper, metals and plastics from municipal waste and the waste treatment market is currently poised at 12% only, hence there is a huge market potential of 88% remaining.

Hence, “Nispana Innovative Platforms Pvt Ltd” present “Waste Management & Recycling Summit – 2014” to bring forward and highlight the future opportunities, capture the most effective and latest technologies which increases ROI in Waste Management Sector and bring in the Industry experts, solution providers from across the globe to share their expertise and make this a successful event in The Waste Management Sector!

For more information or to register click here.

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Webinar: PET Thermoform Recycling - A Progress Report

Webinar: PET Thermoform Recycling - A Progress Report, will take place on April 22, 2014, 1:30 pm - 2:45 pm. This webinar will provide an overview of PET Thermoform recycling, from early research and development efforts; the state of the market today; and a reclaimer's experience in recycling PET thermoforms with PET bottles. Speakers: Resa Dimino, Director of Public Policy, NAPCOR and Ryan L'Abbe, Vice President & General Manager, Ice River Springs - Blue Mountain Plastics Division.


To register click here.

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Plastic Waste in Our Oceans: Problems and Solutions

The sheer volume of plastic and other trash that is floating in our oceans made the hunt for Malaysia Airlines flight 370 far more difficult. The search for the missing airliner has been a harrowing affair. After weeks of sifting through ocean refuse, the armada of ships combing the Indian ocean now claim to be zeroing in on pings that may be emanating from the missing airliner's black boxes. However, this search was hampered by the tons of garbage that are strewn across our oceans.

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One of the unexpected corollaries of the search for Malaysia Airlines flight 370 has been the increase in public awareness about the tons of garbage that litter our oceans. In the first few weeks after the March 8 disappearance of the passenger jet, searchers scoured huge swaths of the Indian Ocean, and found nothing but garbage. In the process of looking for wreckage from the plane, we received almost daily reports of possible debris from satellite images. These finds turned out to be nothing more than floating piles of trash.

The five ocean gyres


There are five massive garbage gyres, one is located in the Indian Ocean, two in the Pacific Ocean and another two in the Atlantic Ocean. Garbage gyres come together as the trash gets caught in circular ocean currents. This causes stray garbage to move until they collide and merge with one another.
University of New South Whales Researcher Erik Van Sebille has suggested there may be a sixth garbage patch forming in the Arctic Circle in the Barents Sea.

Plastic debris


These garbage gyres are made up of everything from appliances to cargo containers, but they are composed mostly of plastic including around 3.5 million tons of beverage bottles and grocery bags. Plastic constitutes 90 percent of all trash floating in the world’s oceans. The United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) estimated that in 2006, every square mile of ocean hosted 46,000 pieces of floating plastic.

Van Sebille said each of these gyres, “contains so much plastic that if you were to drag a net through these areas you would pull up more plastic than biomass.”

Plastic waste in the oceans poses a serious environmental problem. UV rays from the sun and salt from the sea water cause the plastic to break down, which releases chemicals into the water that then enter the food system according to the Scripps Institute at the University of California San Diego.

Plastic poses some unique problems for ocean ecosystems. Some plastics decompose within a year of entering the water, leaching to potentially toxic chemicals such as bisphenol A, PCBs, and derivatives of polystyrene.

Unlike organic debris, plastic does not biodegrade. The plastic in these debris fields will last for hundreds of years. Over time, plastic in the oceans disintegrates into ever smaller pieces while remaining a polymer. This process continues down to the molecular level and concentrates in the upper water column. Plastic pollution in the form of small particles (diameter less than 5 mm) is called “microplastics.”

Wildlife impacts and the food chain


According to UNEP, at least 267 species worldwide are impacted by plastic debris in the oceans. As the plastic disintegrates, it ultimately becomes small enough to be ingested by a wide range of life forms. Plastics are deadly to a number of species including marine birds and sea turtles. Various investigations including research by Charles Moore found that in some places the overall concentration of plastics was seven times greater than the concentration of zooplankton. Plastics enter the food chain when ingested by aquatic organisms and the impacts go all the way up the chain to humans.

Researchers have discovered that floating debris can also absorb organic pollutants from seawater, including PCBs, DDT, and PAHs. When consumed, plastic has both toxic effects and disruptive impacts on the endocrine system.

Source of debris


It is crudely estimated that 80 percent of the garbage comes from land-based sources and 20 percent is from ships. According to a 2011 EPA report titled, Marine Debris in the North Pacific:
“The primary source of marine debris is the improper waste disposal or management of trash and manufacturing products, including plastics (e.g., littering, illegal dumping) … Debris is generated on land at marinas, ports, rivers, harbors, docks, and storm drains. Debris is generated at sea from fishing vessels, stationary platforms and cargo ships.”
Much of the land-based sources of ocean waste originates from the great rivers from around the world

Size of debris fields


According to some media reports, ocean borne garbage is up to “twice the size of the continental United States”. Although these estimates are hardly precise, they range from 700,000 square kilometres (270,000 sq mi) to more than 15,000,000 square kilometres (5,800,000 sq mi).

Investigations, raising awareness and cleanup efforts


There are a wide range of innovative efforts to raise awareness about ocean garbage and cleanup these debris fields. In 2008, a sailing voyage called the “Junk Raft” sought to raise awareness with a three month voyage across the Pacific. Also in 2008, Richard Sundance Owen formed the Environmental Cleanup Coalition (ECC) a collaborative effort to address the issue of North Pacific pollution. They work on developing methods to safely remove plastic and persistent organic pollutants from the oceans.

In 2009, Project Kaisei launched a cleanup study that included two vessels that set out to research and assess the feasibility of commercial scale collection and recycling of ocean borne garbage.

Another 2009 investigation titled the SEAPLEX expedition, involved a 19 day ocean journey by a group of researchers from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. They spent 19 days studying the distribution of plastic in the gyre which resulted in the most rigorous study to date.

In 2012, Dutch Aerospace Engineering student Boyan Slat unveiled a concept for removing large amounts of marine debris. He subsequently formed an organization called The Ocean Cleanup. This approach is not only cost effective, it is potentially profitable. His idea involves an anchored network of booms that world work like a giant funnel. Propelled by the ocean’s surface currents, debris would drift into specially designed arms and collection platforms where it would be separated from plankton and recycled. Slat’s calculations suggest that using his methods, 7.25 million tons of plastic can be removed from garbage gyres in as little as five years.

South Korean designer Sung Jin Cho has conceived of another innovative approach to removing plastic waste from water. His concept is known as the Seawer Skyscraper. This massive yet portable, self-supported solar-hydro power station, generates electricity using seawater while removing plastic waste. The Seawer filters ocean water and removes plastics and other particles which are recycled in an onboard plant. The purified seawater is stored in a large sedimentation tank at the bottom of the structure before it is released back into the ocean.

Despite these creative approaches to removing debris from the world’s oceans, they will not be able to reach the majority of plastic which have accumulated on the ocean floor.

Of the more than 200 billion pounds of plastic the world produces each year, about 10 percent ends up in the ocean. Much of which (approximately 70 percent) sinks to the bottom and harms life on the ocean floor.

In the North Sea alone, Dutch scientists have counted around 110 pieces of litter for every square kilometre of the seabed. This amounts to a staggering 600,000 tonnes in the North Sea alone. This garbage can smother the sea bottom and kill the marine life.

While efforts to clean up the plastics are laudable, they are not a definitive solution. Plastics break down into smaller polymers and suspend underneath the surface or on the ocean floor making them hard to see and difficult to clean up.

Plastic waste comes from almost every country in the world which makes ocean garbage an international problem requiring international solutions. While we can dispose of our waste more responsibly, the problem extends far beyond waste management. With Around 100 million tonnes of plastic products being produced each year, we need to find solutions at the source.

We need to find alternatives to conventional plastics that are biodegradable and do not contain harmful chemicals.

Source: Global Warming is Real

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Event - PA Recycling Market Development Summit: Spotlight on Organics

Recycling Market Development will take place on February 20, 2014 between 9:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. at the Hilton Garden Inn Philadelphia Center City, 1100 Arch Street, Philadelphia, PA. Markets development programming from organics industry experts blended with peer networking. The Keynote Address will be delivered by Shawn M. Garvin, U.S. EPA Regional Administrator.

Presentation Topics:

Organics Management Initiatives in EPA Region III (Mid-Atlantic)
Update of Food Waste Composting and Anaerobic Digestion Capacity in PA
Waste Reduction, Job Creation and Environmental Protection Through Organics Management
Food Waste Diversion Models for Urban Settings; Organics Management Equipment and Technology Session.

Click here to download the agenda.
Click here to download registration form questions.

For more information email info@parmc.org or call 717-948-6660.

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Five Webinars - RecycleMania 2014

Here are five webinars for RecycleMania 2014.  The RecycleMania Tournament is a competition designed to help schools to recycle and minimize waste. The competition enables participants to track their trash and recycling collections over an 8 week period in the spring of 2014.

Tournament Overview - November 21, 2013 at 3:00 EST

This high level presentation will review 1) how schools participate in RecycleMania and 2) resources and special promotions for the 2014 program. Join us for the full webinar if you're interested in RecycleMania and want to know what is involved, or jump on at 3:30 if you’re a returning coordinator just looking for an update on the coming year. This program will only address rules and promotional strategies in general terms.

Register Here

Promotional Strategies #1 - December 3 at 3:00 EST

This presentation will outline promotional strategies and activities that you can use to engage your campus for RecycleMania 2013. Whether you need a zero-cost activity or a large-scale event, we have an idea for you. Hear from 2013 Grand Champion University of Missouri Kansas City as well as University of Buffalo. We’ll also discuss our new “Event in a Box: Just Add Students” toolkits available for RecycleMania 2014.

Register Here

Note: You can find case study presentations from recent years on the Featured Schools page.

Rules and Reporting #1 - January 9 at 2:00 EST

Join us for an in-depth explanation of the Tournament rules and reporting expectations. This presentation will describe how to track materials and troubleshoot issues with getting data.

Register Here

Promotional Strategies #2 - January 16, 2014 at 2:00 EST

This presentation will include a repeat of the overview of promotional ideas and strategies from the Dec. 5 webinar, as well as additional case study presentations from different RecycleMania schools (TBD).

Register Here

Rules and Reporting #2 - January 23, 2014 at 2:00 EST

This presentation will be a repeat of the January 9 Rules & Reporting webinar.

To register click here.

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Video - Recycling: Let Garbage Live Again



In recognition of America Recycles Day here is a video sponsored by Keep America Beautiful and the Ad Council. It aims to generate awareness, explain how and where to recycle, mobilize individual ownership and emotional connection to recycling through community building, and transform recycling into a daily social norm. The campaign shows consumers that their recyclable materials want to be something more, and promotes recycling as a way to give garbage another life.

In "Journey," a plastic bottle refuses to settle for being just a bottle and recognizes its dream in a coast-to-coast journey after being recycled.

Click here to learn more.

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Simple Recycling Tips for Offices and Workplaces

Almost everything we use in our offices can be recycled, including printed paper, used ink cartridges, empty cartons and old computers and printers. Here are 5 simple tips from the Green Business Bureau to help your business to recycle:

1. Find a recycling center near you (click here)

2. Place clearly labeled recycling bins around the office. Provide separate bins for plastic, metal, glass and paper if your recycling system is not single-stream.

3. Place bins strategically. Easily accessible recycling bins are more likely to be used. Place a paper-recycling bin near the printer and aluminum/plastic/glass recycling bin in kitchen and break room.

4. Recycle hardware carefully. Take used batteries, old computers and printers to a certified electronic recycling facility.

5. Select a recycling coordinator. As with other programs, accountability is important. Choose a recycling coordinator who would be responsible for dropping off the recycled material at the right locations, encouraging and educating other employees about benefits of recycling. The recycling coordinator can also reward employees who recycle most with a free lunch, day off, etc.

Missouri City’s Green Committee Recycling Initiative was launched in 2012. They highlight some key points that reinforce the Green Business Bureau's recommendations. They suggest that clear labels and a central recycling location are the keys to creating a robust workplace recycling program. They also indicate that it is crucial to ensure that people understand the objectives of such a program.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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Businesses Innovative and Diverse Recycling Efforts

There are a number of recycling campaigns in companies across the US and around the world. Some of the campaigns represent traditional tried and true approaches, others are far more novel. For years now Target has been supporting recycling throughout their 1,740 US stores. Their recycling stations accept aluminum, glass and plastic beverage containers, plastic bags, MP3 players, cell phones and ink cartridges.

In October, Johnson & Johnson launched a unique bathroom recycling initiative called CARE TO RECYCLE™.  Many Americans are not even aware that bathroom products can be recycled. As revealed by a Shelton Group poll, recycling in the bathroom is uncommon with less than half (40 percent) of Americans indicating that they recycle bathroom items.While 7 out of 10 Americans say they always or almost always recycle, only 1 in 5 Americans consistently recycle in the bathroom. This can have a major impact on the environment: Each year, Americans throw away enough 15-oz. shampoo bottles to fill 1,164 football fields—that’s 18,000 tons of plastic ending up in landfills. To help increase the recycling of bathroom products, Johnson partnered with several organizations, including Recyclebank, Keep America Beautiful, Earth 911 and Net Impact. 

One innovative recycling effort involves using waste for packaging. One great example of this phenomenon involves using chocolate waste to wrap chocolate products. In the UK James Cropper has developed a recycling process that the UK does just that.

Recycling of waste water is another increasingly popular business initiative. This is not only good for the environment but it can save companies money. Intel's plants now recycle 60 percent of their waste water. At its plant in Chandler, Arizona, Intel treats 2 million gallons of industrial water a day.

An innovative approach called "EcoVolt" uses microbes to recycle waste water. As reported by Environmental Leader, beverage companies can save more than $1M annually’ using this waste water treatment option. Using this system California’s Clos du Bois Winery, has reduced water and electricity costs while producing a surplus of reusable energy. An EcoVolt system can also substantially cut a facility’s carbon footprint.

Other companies offer awards in recognition of exceptional recycling efforts. For example, Coke has expanded it Recycling Awards Program.

Not all recycling news is good news. Some companies have been trying to cash in on the popularity of recycling by making false claims about biodegradable plastics. In response the FTC has been cracking down on such claims and they have taken action against six companies.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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The Value of Workplace Recycling is About More than just Money

In addition to monetary considerations associated with recycling the business community has a critical role to play helping disseminating the practice with other businesses and consumers. Recycling not only reduces environmental footprints, experienced organizations can also share their expertise and encourage others to follow their lead.

Companies are coming to terms with growing resource scarcity and recycling is an essential part of sustainability strategies. A growing number of environmentally conscious consumers are demanding that companies not only engage in more ecologically responsible practices but they want them to share their values with consumers. Recycling in the workplace can save energy, reduce emissions and minimize contributions to landfills, as well as conserve natural resources and generate jobs.

A UNEP report suggests investing $108 million in the waste sector annually could increase recycling threefold by 2050 and reduce landfill contents by more than 85 percent. In Brazil, recycling already makes more than $2 billion a year while avoiding 10 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions.

Recycling rates in the US are about half of states like Austria and Germany. However US recycling rates are getting better. The rate of industry recycling of aluminum has shown clear evidence of improvement in the US. According to a report in Environmental Leader, that rate climbed to 67 percent in 2012 continuing a decade long upward trend. Recycling aluminum can make a big difference. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recycling aluminum cans saves 95 percent of the energy needed to make aluminum from bauxite ore.

EPA statistics indicate that as much as 45 percent of the 250 million tons of municipal waste generated in 2011 was from commercial and institutional locations such as business and government offices, retail establishments, schools and hospitals.

According to the study “What Workers Want in 2012,″ 83 percent of consumers think companies should try to accomplish their business goals while still trying to improve society and the environment. 

Recycling in the workplace is a popular phenomenon for both consumers and workers. According to a National Geographic survey, more than 80 percent of US workers polled said they believe it is important to work for a company or organization that makes the environment a top priority. A Net Impact Study shows this also contributes to work satisfaction.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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RecycleMania Tournament 2014: Student Recycling and Waste Reduction Competition

The RecycleMania Tournament is a competition designed to help schools to recycle and minimize waste. The 2014 RecycleMania competition enables participants to track their trash and recycling collections over an 8 week period in the spring of 2014. The accomplishments of schools and colleges will be compared as they compete in various categories. These competition includes awards in a number of categories including waste per capita, the best recycling rates and least amount of waste and recycling produced overall.

NWF Campus Ecology is a proud partner of  RecycleMania. Click here to explore NWF Campus Ecology's case study database and access tools to rally students behind using less and caring more. Just search "Waste Reduction."

Click here to enter RecycleMania 2014.

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Businesses Take the Recycling at Work Pledge!

A growing number of businesses are already recycling. Not only does this have a tangible environmental benefit, it also helps to promote your brand. America Recycles Day makes it easy to recycle. Simply follow the Recycling at Work 10-Step Action Plan to building a successful employee-driven recycling program (see list of complimentary tools and resources at the bottom of the page).

When your business or organization takes the Recycling at Work pledge, you earn immediate recognition as a Pledge Partner and can begin accessing a range of benefits to help you increase recycling in the workplace. Take the pledge today and join the other businesses, government agencies, hospitals, schools and institutions in the national effort to increase Recycling at Work.

Here are a few of the many benefits:
  • Boost employee morale by engaging them in a cause with environmental, social and economic benefits
  • Reduce your environmental impact and realize potential cost-savings from waste reduction
  • Exchange ideas and best practices with other Pledge Partners
  • Earn national recognition among other respected organizations and leading companies
  • Have your logo featured on the Recycling at Work home page and your organization listed on our Pledge Partner page
  • Become eligible for special discounts on recycling bins
  • Access free webinars on best practices in workplace recycling
  • Learn about free recycling resources in your community
  • Receive periodic updates and helpful tips from Recycling at Work
  • Submit your recycling best practices case study and photos for consideration to be featured on the Recycling at Work website
Recycle at Work Pledge

We the undersigned pledge to recycle more of materials generated at our workplace by 10 percent over the next two years.*

We will achieve our goal by taking actions which may include:
  • Identifying opportunities to recycle more and waste less
  • Making recycling more convenient in our workplace to enable greater participation
  • Increasing employee awareness of waste reduction and recycling opportunities in the workplace
  • Identifying cost-effective opportunities to purchase products with recycled content
  • Implementing purchasing policies that consider a product’s end of life use and recyclability
  • Reporting on our actions and progress through the Recycling at Work online reporting system
  • Celebrating our success
  • Inviting at least one other company or organization to take this Pledge
My organization is proud to take the Recycling at Work pledge and join other businesses and organizations in increasing recycling at our workplace. Every action adds up to making a difference.

Click here to take the Recycle at Work Pledge

Make your “I Recycle” pledge go even further through our America Recycles Day Thunderclap, which will post a synchronized message of support on the Facebook or Twitter accounts of all our supporters at the exact same time on America Recycles Day. The more people that spread the word, the bigger difference we can make. Click here to go to Thunderclap.

Click here for to get ideas for activities and events to engage employees in recycling
Click here to download free educational resources and training materials
Click here to access and customize communications templates and promotional materials to publicize your success

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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America Recycles Day

Friday November 15 is America Recycles Day (ARD), an annual event created by Keep America Beautiful (KAB). Recycling is one of the easiest things we can do to reduce our environmental impacts. Through ARD, KAB increases awareness and encourages people to pledge to recycle. This is more than a consciousness raising exercise through consorted national action this event makes a meaningful difference. In addition to pledges, more than 2 million people participated in events across the country in 2012. Through these activities a total of 3.7 million pounds of recyclables were collected which is equivalent to eliminating the emissions of 280 cars. The day of action is meant as a springboard that incorporates recycling into out daily lives.

To join an event click here.
To find your nearest recycling center or to learn more about recycling click here.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

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