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KNOW YOUR TRASH FACTS

About 80% of what Americans throw away is recyclable, yet our recycling rate is just 33%. (Environmental Protection Agency)

More than ½ million trees are saved each year by recycling paper in Boulder County. (Eco-Cycle)

By recycling more than 57,000 tons of steel cans, we reduce greenhouse gasses equivalent to taking more than 21,000 cars off the road each year. (WM)

Recycling glass instead of making it from silica sand reduces mining waste by 70%, water use by 50%, and air pollution by 20%. (Environmental Defense Fund)

If we recycled all of the newspapers printed in the U.S. on a typical Sunday, we would save 550,000 trees—or about 26 million trees per year. (California Department of Conservation)

The energy saved each year by steel recycling is equal to the electrical power used by 18 million homes each year—or enough energy to last Los Angeles residents for eight years. (Steel Recycling Institute)

The total volume of solid waste produced in the U.S. each year is equal to the weight of more than 5,600 Nimitz Class air craft carriers, 247,000 space shuttles, or 2.3 million Boeing 747 jumbo jets. (Beck)

An average kitchen-size bag of trash contains enough energy to light a 100-watt light bulb for more than 24 hours. (Covanta)

The solid waste industry currently produces more than half of America's renewable energy, more than combined energy outputs of the solar, geothermal, hydroelectric, and wind power industries. (U.S. DOE, Energy Information Administration)

Recycling 1 ton of paper saves 17 trees, 2 barrels of oil (enough to run the average car for 1,260 miles), 4,100 kilowatts of energy (enough power for the average home for 6 months), 3.2 cubic yards of landfill space, and 60 pounds of air pollution. (Trash to Cash)

Recycling just one aluminum can saves enough energy to operate a TV for 3 hours. (Eco-Cycle)

Glass can be recycled an indefinite number of times and never wears out. (National Recycling Coalition)

Making glass from recycled material cuts related water pollution by 50%. (National Recycling Coalition)

If we put all of the solid waste collected in the U.S. in a line of average garbage trucks, that line of trucks could cross the country, extending from New York City to Los Angeles, more than 100 times. (Beck)

Five PET bottles (plastic soda bottles) yield enough fiber for one extra large T-shirt, one square food of carpet or enough fiber fill to fill one ski jacket. (National Recycling Coalition)

The average person has the opportunity to recycle more than 25,000 cans in a lifetime. (National Recycling Coalition)

Americans throw away enough office paper each year to build a 12-foot-high wall of paper from New York to Seattle. (National Recycling Coalition)

The average American discards seven and a half pounds of garbage every day. (National Recycling Coalition)

Once an aluminum can is recycled, it's back on the grocery shelf as another aluminum can in 60 days. (www.aluminum.org)

Americans throw away enough aluminum every three months to rebuild our entire commercial air fleet. (www.aluminum.org)

Tossing away an aluminum can wastes as much energy as pouring out half of that can's volume of gasoline. (www.aluminum.org)

Enough aluminum cans were recycled last year to fill a hollow Empire State Building 24 times. (www.aluminum.org)

The 62.6 billion cans recycled last year alone would make 171 circles around the earth at its equator. (www.aluminum.org)

Some 119,482 cans are recycled every minute nationwide. (www.aluminum.org)

Over the past 10 years, the number of aluminum cans recycled has doubled. (www.aluminum.org)

More than one million tons of aluminum containers and packaging are thrown away each year. (www.aluminum.org)

Recycling 1 ton of aluminum saves the equivalent in energy of 2,350 gallons of gasoline. This is equivalent to the amount of electricity used by the average home over a period of 10 years. (www.aluminum.org)

By using recycled aluminum instead of virgin ore, aluminum manufactures save enough energy needed to supply electricity to a city the size of Pittsburgh for about six years. (www.aluminum.org)

In 2006, the amount of paper recovered for recycling averaged 357 pounds for each man, woman, and child in the United States. (http://earth911.org)

Every ton of paper recycled saves more than 3.3 cubic yards of landfill space. (http://earth911.org)

By 2012, the paper industry’s goal is to recover 55 percent of all the paper Americans consume for recycling, which is approximately 55 million tons of paper. (http://earth911.org)

More than 37 percent of the fiber used to make new paper products in the United States comes from recycled sources. (http://earth911.org)

86 percent (approximately 254 million) of Americans have access to curbside or drop-off paper recycling programs. (http://earth911.org)

Every month, we throw out enough recyclable glass bottles and jars to fill up a giant skyscraper. (www.recycling-revolution.com)

The energy saved from recycling one glass bottle can run a 100-watt light bulb for four hours. It also causes 20% less air pollution and 50% less water pollution than when a new bottle is made from raw materials. (www.recycling-revolution.com)

Every year, Americans throw away enough office and writing paper to build a wall 12 feet high, stretching from Los Angeles to New York City. (www.fairfaxcounty.gov)

Recycling one ton of paper saves one acre of trees. (www.fairfaxcounty.gov)

If all the glass bottles and jars collected through recycling in the U.S. in one year were laid end-to-end, they would reach the Moon and half way back to the Earth. (www.fairfaxcounty.gov)

The volume of glass recycled by Americans in one year would fill New Jersey's Giants Stadium more than three times. (www.fairfaxcounty.gov)

Glass can be recycled an infinite number of times. (www.fairfaxcounty.gov)

The energy saved from recycling one glass bottle will light a 100-watt bulb for four hours. (www.fairfaxcounty.gov)

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Electronic Waste

Our modern society depends heavily on electronics products from computers to televisions to cell phones and hundreds of other products. Yet while they are so important to our daily lives, eventually they are thrown out, either because they no longer work properly or because they are being replaced by newer, better products. When thrown away, electronics products are popularly known as “e-waste” or "e-scrap."

Many of these products include materials that can be harmful if managed improperly. Lead, for instance, commonly found in television sets, computer monitors and cell phones, can have serious health affects on humans if ingested. As a result, several states ban the disposal of some electronics products.

NSWMA believes that electronics waste must be handled properly. NSWMA does not support disposal bans on these products, however, because the evidence does not show a potential harm to human health or the environment. For a further look at the potential impact of e-scrap in landfills see "Poison PCs?" and "Toxic Trash."

To counter misinformation about the impact of electronics products in landfills, the NSWMA along with the Solid Waste Association of North America sent a joint letter to the United States Congress noting that these products could be safely landfilled, while also noting the importance of recycling these products.

NSMWA supports e-scrap recycling programs, but does not believe that e-scrap recycling should be an unfunded mandate.

In 2006, NSWMA adopted the following policy on e-scrap:

"The National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA), a trade association representing the solid waste and recycling industries, supports a multi-prong program for managing electronic product discards. This includes:

  • Decreasing the hazardous materials used in manufacturing electronics products without compromising product efficiency or safety;
  • Increasing recyclability by designing electronics products to be easily disassembled and processed;
  • Providing financial support for electronics recycling through an advance recycling fee or manufacturer responsibility requirements so that electronics recycling does not become an unfunded mandate for local government or for private sector recyclers;
  • Increasing electronics recycling by building upon the existing solid waste and recycling infrastructure for collection and processing;
  • Ensuring environmental, health and safety standards for proper management of collected materials including reporting and documentation procedures by end-markets;
  • Supporting programs to develop new processing technologies;
  • Supporting programs to develop new end markets, including the possibility of recycled content provisions in new electronics products;
  • Using “rates and dates” to ensure accountability if manufacturer responsibility programs are adopted;
  • Opposing bans on land disposal of electronics products until adequate infrastructure is readily available to ensure that they will be recycled."

NSWMA, joined by the Solid Waste Association of North America, the Integrated Waste Services Association and the National Recycling Coalition issued a press release and a joint policy on e-scrap pledging to work together to achieve as close to 100 percent recycling of these products as possible.

Learn how you can re-use or recycle your electronic waste.