JOEBIALEK Posted August 11, 2007 Report Posted August 11, 2007 According to Wikipedia {the free encyclopedia} "recycling is the reprocessing of materials into new products. Recycling generally prevents the waste of potentially useful materials, reduces the consumption of raw materials and reduces energy usage, and hence greenhouse gas emissions, compared to virgin production." The recent discussion concerning global warming has focused primarily on alternative sources of fuel for the purpose of transportation. However, another very important pro-environment tool is recycling. The effort needs to involve more than the consumer and the government. It needs to involve those who sell {and profit} from those products that can be recycled. For example, the manufactures of bottles and cans along with the producers of what's sold inside them as well as the grocery stores that distribute them must take on a greater economic role in the process of recycling. The voluntary "blue bag at the curb" approach is a good start but it relies primarily on the altruism of the consumer. The question is: does the consumer bear sole responsibility for what happens to a can or bottle that contains the product used? or should some of that responsibility be borne by those who profit from its' use? Are these responsibilities being borne already and are they equitable? Some time ago bottlers would charge a five-cent "deposit" on a bottle to be "refunded" when the consumer returned the bottle. It would seem that this concept could be reoperationalized for a whole host of products. The consumer could clean the bottle or can, return it to the grocery story for a "refund" and the grocery store would return it to the producer then to the manufacturer etcetera each receiving a "refund" along the way. When all parties involved have an economic incentive to participate, recycling will make a much larger contribution towards preserving the environment. Quote
Star30 Posted August 21, 2007 Report Posted August 21, 2007 Good points. Homestead Creamery produces ice cream, butter and bottled milk. The consumer pays a deposit on the glass bottle and is paid back on turn in at the grocery store. Education is key for any age. We all play a part. Our family recycles as much as possible with paper, bottle and aluminum products through the curb side recycling pick up. My mother even dishwashes her cans. I started putting shredded paper out in the yard to control weeds along with composting. What do you do? In the USA if you want to help keep taxes down, recycle. Recycling saves cities and towns etc. money by reducing the garbage to transport / process. Every penny counts. Do companies contribute money or are they charged a tax for processing the product container? If or when money is made by the government for recycling these materials is it legal to charge for processing the container? Do you see where I am coming from? Quote
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