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Reduce Reuse Recycle Posts from Around The World

BUY ME A COFFEE

Project: Home > Recycle your Christmas

Project: Home -- Recycle your Christmas - By SEAN MURPHY-Correspondent We all love getting our Christmas trees, don't we? Sometimes we escape into nature to trudge up hills through inclement weather and cut the tree down ourselves — an invigorating, rewarding and primal hands-on approach.  View Full Story

Recycling News

http://newscenter.berkeley.edu/2013/11/11/roadshows-to-highlight-greener-office-products/ From Berkeley: Reuse, recycle, refill: writing the future with green pens BERKELEY — While conducting a "waste audit" on select campus trash bins, sustainability-minded Berkeley students discovered not just to-be-expected coffee-cup lids but a surprising assortment of oddball plastic items, from plastic bags to pipette trays and contact-lens cases. "I had a whole team of four trying to figure out what each plastic was," recalls fourth-year student Kristen Klein, coordinator of the Zero Waste Research Center, a project funded by students via a grant from The Green Initiative Fund (TGIF) ."We separated the plastics out, Nos. 1 through 7," and wrote a "huge report" on the campus's plastics footprint, she says.

The Recycling Journey of the Plastic Beverage Bottle

From Canada Free Press: You probably know that recycling a plastic beverage bottle recaptures its value and keeps it out of the local landfill. You may also know that the bottle can live a second life in a container, carpeting, playground equipment, automobile parts, sleeping bags, shoes, luggage, other plastic containers and even clothing. But have you ever wondered exactly how the plastic bottle that you toss in the recycling bin becomes a new T-shirt or rug? The transformation from beverage bottle to new product begins at a recycling facility that receives large bales of used plastic bottles. The bottles are compressed into bales to reduce transportation costs and energy.  These bottles already have been pre-sorted, so each bale should contain only one type of plastic: polyethylene teraphthalate (PET), the type of plastic most commonly used to make pop, water, juice, sport drinks and other beverage bottles. The Recycling Journey of the Plastic Beverage Bottle