Question: Why Should I
Recycle?
Answer: You Can Make a
Difference!
Many individuals feel they can't have an impact on environmental
problems due to their complexity. Issues like global warming,
hazardous waste, loss of rain forests, endangered species, acid rain,
the ozone layer and our waste disposal crisis can feel huge and out of
our control. But there's good news, there are some things
that individuals can control. Our
waste reduction and recycling efforts can make a difference -
especially within our state. Click to
read about
the
environmental benefits of recycling in Massachusetts.1
Recycling
Saves Our Environment
Recycling
Saves Energy
Recycling
Saves Natural Resources
More
Environmental Benefits Links
Click here to learn
about the Economic Benefits of
Recycling!
Recycling Saves Our
Environment
Massachusetts recycling provides industry
with an environmentally preferable source of materials: Most
people know that recycling plays an important role in managing the
garbage generated in homes and businesses, and that it reduces the
reliance on landfills and incinerators. But recycling is far more
than a local material management strategy; it is also an important
strategy for reducing the environmental impacts of industrial
production. Supplying industry with recycled materials rather
than virgin resources extracted from forests and mines is
environmentally preferable because it saves energy, reduces emissions
of greenhouse gases, and other dangerous air and water pollutants, and
because it conserves scarce natural resources.
- In 2004, Massachusetts’s municipal and commercial
recycling programs collected and supplied 6,715,671 tons of scrap
commodities such as paper, glass, metals, plastics, computers, and
construction & demolition (C&D) materials for use in the
production of new products.
Greenhouse gas
emissions are reduced by Massachusetts recycling: By reducing the amount of energy used by
industry, recycling also
reduces greenhouse gas emissions and helps stem the dangers of global
climate change. This reduction occurs because much of the energy
used
in industrial processes and in transportation involves burning fossil
fuels like gasoline, diesel and coal - the most important sources of
carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions into the environment.
- Massachusetts recycling reduced greenhouse gas
emissions by 2,073,814 metric tons of carbon equivalents (MTCE) in
2004. This is equivalent to approximately 104% of all industrial
MTCE emissions generated from fossil fuel combustion in Massachusetts
and 9% of greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon dioxide (CO2),
methane (CH4), nitrous oxides (N2O),
hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulfur
hexafluoride (SF6).
- Curbside recycling alone accounted for a reduction in
greenhouse gas emissions of 1,093,959 MTCE in 2004.
Recycling Saves Energy
Massachusetts recycling
saves energy: Energy savings may be the
most important environmental benefit of
recycling, because using energy requires the consumption of scarce
fossil fuels and involves emissions of numerous air and water
pollutants. The steps in supplying materials to industry
(including
collection, processing and transportation) typically use less energy
than the steps in supplying virgin materials to industry (including
extraction, refinement, transportation and processing). But most
energy savings associated with recycling accrue at least once.
- It takes 95% less
energy to recycle aluminum than it does to make it from raw
materials. Making recycled steel saves 60%, recycled newspaper
40%, recycled plastic 70%, and recycled glass 40%.2
- Every
pound of steel recycled saves 5,450 BTUs of energy, enough to light a
60-watt bulb for over 26 hours. Recycling just one can saves
enough electricity to light a 100-watt bulb for 3.5 hours.3
- In 2004, Massachusetts’s recycling saved a total of
85,146,285 Million BTUs of energy, equal to 32% of all energy used by
industry in Massachusetts. This is equivalent to 685,347,637
gallons of gasoline. It represents the amount of energy that
would be required to power 820,292 homes for one year in
Massachusetts.
- Curbside recycling alone saved 28,606,312 Million
BTUs of energy in 2004.
Recycling Saves Natural
Resources
Massachusetts's recycling
conserves natural resources: Recycling is an important strategy
in conserving the world's scarce
natural resources. Recycling reduces the need for landfills and
other disposal facilities, thereby allowing local lands to be used in
more environmentally preferable ways. And, by substituting scrap
materials for the use of trees, metal ores, minerals, oil and other
virgin materials, recycling reduces the pressure to expand forestry and
mining production.
- When one ton of steel is recycled, 2,500 pounds of
iron ore, 1,400 pounds of coal and 120 pounds of limestone are
conserved.2
- By recycling 1,205,311 tons of scrap metal and glass
in 2004, Massachusetts’s recycling efforts reduced the need for virgin
materials, including 130,171 tons of limestone, 946,709 tons of iron
ore, 530,157 tons of coal, 289,861 tons of sand, 91,418 tons of soda
ash, and 35,675 tons of feldspar.
- Recycling 1,098,776 tons of all types of paper saved
3,625,961 cubic yards of landfill space.
Additional Links on
Environmental Benefits of Recycling
Are we
missing your favorite Recycling Benefits? Send them to MassRecycle.
Sources:
1. Unless otherwise noted, all data reported
above was developed through the use of the Northeast
Recycling Council, Inc. (NERC) Environmental Benefits Calculator,
September 2006. For more information about the Calculator, please
visit:
http://www.nerc.org/documents/aboutcalc.html.
2. National Recycling Coalition (NRC). Environmental
Benefits of Recycling.
3. Pennsylvania's Department of Environmental Protection (PA DEP). Recycling
Saves Energy.
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