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America Inspired

Green Living 101: Why is it important to recycle glass?


Photo courtesy of O-I

Unlike other packing materials, glass is 100 percent recyclable 100 percent of the time. Glass makers and recyclers are calling all Americans to recycle more glass.

The United States does not mandate the recycling of glass. Many counties do not have adequate facilities to sort plastic, paper and other recyclable materials from glass. This is known as single-stream recycling and leaves a greater chance of glass being contaminated by other materials and therefore unusable for recycling. Of the 17 million tons of glass (also known as cullet) in the waste stream, only about 2.5 millon tons are reused by glassmakers every year.

So how can you help? Start by talking to your local representative about starting a deposit program for recycling glass. This will increase the chance that deposited glass will actually be recycled and reused to make new glass items.

Another way to help is to get your community to start multi-stream recycling. This means that you take on more responsibility in the recycling process by sorting your own items for pick-up. Usually, this means you get three bins, one for paper, one for plastics and one for glass. Finally, make sure that restaurants and bars in your community have recycling programs in place.

Research conducted by O-I shows that if the United States were to increase glass recycling by only 10 percent, manufacturers would see a 2.5 percent reduction in energy required for bottle production, a 10 percent reduction of sulfur oxides, an eight percent reducion in particulates and a four percent reduction in nitrogen oxide. And, all of this glass being recycled means it won't spend an eternity in a landfill.

The EPA estimates that if 50 percent of cullet was reused, the domestic energy savings would be enough to power more than 45,000 households for a year! Recycling glass helps you and the environment. So get involved, talk to local representatives and do your part to make sure that as much glass as possible is reused.

For more information, click here to visit O-I's website. O-I is North America's leading producer of glass containers and is taking a stand to see that more glass ends up back in the cullet market instead of in a landfill.

 

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Home & Living 101 Examiner

Taylor Olson is an Examiner.com intern who plans to graduate from Seattle University in December 2009 with a degree in journalism. From green...

Comments

  • Ron 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    Nice article, but you need to look at the big picture. Single stream recycling increases total recycling rates 20 to 40%. Staying with multiple streams may increase glass recycling percentages but would have a negative effect on total recycling. Don't assume that if glass is not re-used to make glass items that it is not reused for another purpose. Glass cullit makes a great drainage material for use in construction.

  • Mike 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    Contamination of glass with other materials isn't the only issue with single stream collection systems. a more serious issue is that single stream collection has the potential to contaminate the fibre streams with broken glass.

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