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Tagged : recycle-reuse
Find reputable e-waste recyclers using e-Stewards
By John DeFore

As disheartening as it is to hear, you may not be doing anybody any good by taking broken electronics to a firm promising to recycle it. In fact, your good-faith act could be leading to disease and hellish pollution in some of the world’s most impoverished villages.
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Tags: · Basel Action Network, e-Stewards, Electronic Recyclers International, Electronic Waste, Recycle & Reuse
Florida plans to recycle campaign signs
By Barbara Kessler
Recycling. It works for campaign slogans. Now the government of Florida figures it can work for those accumulating campaign signs as well.
The state is encouraging local entities to come up with innovative plans in hopes of recycling 75% of the signs that line local lanes and thoroughfares in the run up to the election Nov. 4, according to the Environmental News Service.
By encouraging candidates and citizens to recycle the signs instead of trashing them, the Florida Department of Environmental Protection will be working toward its mandate to reduce waste heading for landfills by 75 percent by 2020.
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Tags: · Florida, Recycle & Reuse
Houston launches Recycle Ike program for hurricane debris
By Julie Bonnin
Attention all recycling innovators: they city of Houston has launched a nationwide contest designed to create new markets for recycled tree limbs and make use of the mountains of woody vegetation left in Hurricane Ike’s wake.
With enough tree trunks, branches and other tree remnants to fill Houston’s Astrodome nearly four times, the debris- 5.6 million cubic yards — far surpasses what can be used locally for mulch.
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Tags: · Houston, Hurricane Ike, mulche, Recycle & Reuse, Trees
Push to make water filters recyclable
By John DeFore

Everyone knows by now that habitually buying bottled water introduces a staggering amount of wasted plastic into the world. Even if you conscientiously recycle every bottle, that recycling process uses energy and would be unnecessary if you used a non-disposable drinking vessel instead.
For those who have ditched the bottled water habit but don’t trust what comes from their tap, water filters are an appealing solution. Filter-makers have seized upon environmental concerns, and Brita even teamed with Nalgene for an ad campaign disguised as a green awareness effort that asks readers to “take the pledge” to buy filters and reusable bottles.
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Tags: · Abundant Earth, Bottled Water, Brita, Clorox, Recycle & Reuse, water filter, ZeroWater
Recycling wind turbines
By Catherine Colbert
Aging wind turbines - some installed more than 20 years ago - are getting a second wind. Towering gracefully among California wind farms, an estimated 10,000 machines are slated to be replaced by more modern and much larger wind turbines.
Instead of laying these wind soldiers to rest, a Massachusetts company is focused on breathing new life into them through what it has coined “The Ultimate Recycling Project.”
Aeronautica Windpower, as part of its business as a wind turbine and tower manufacturer, harvests the better machines from the field and refurbishes them to give them a second life. The firm likens the modern windmills to aircraft, as they’re stripped down to their frames and rebuilt with newer technologies and reporting capabilities to fly for another 20 years.
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Tags: · Aeronautica Windpower, Catherine Colbert, Recycle & Reuse, Wind Turbines
L.A. experiments with food-scrap recycling
By John DeFore

Some unenthusiastic recyclers grouse about having to keep separate collection barrels for glass, plastics and paper. Imagine the whining taking place in Southern California right now, as certain Los Angeles residents are being asked to start separating food scraps from the rest of their trash as well.
Following the lead of existing programs in places like Seattle and the San Francisco Bay Area, L.A. is testing a food-waste recycling program in pursuit of its zero-waste goal. As the L.A. Times reported when the plan was announced, around 5,000 residents of three neighborhoods are being recruited for the experiment: Each gets a two-gallon bin (the size of a small cooler), which they’re to keep in the kitchen and fill with a variety of food-related waste — not just apple cores and spoiled leftovers, but egg shells, bones, and even non-food items like pizza boxes and paper plates that have been soiled by food contact and therefore are forbidden in the normal recycling bin.
On collection day, residents are to empty these kitchen bins into curbside receptacles they already have — the green ones used for leaves and tree branches. That material should, in the colorful language of a city report, “absorb fugitive liquids” and keep odor to a minimum. Together, food and lawn waste eventually will be turned into compost.
Los Angeles already has a program helping restaurants recycle their wasted food, but estimates that over a quarter of what goes into residential trash bins is food waste as well. According to this NPR report, planners believe that if it were to expand throughout the city, this household scrap collection could divert “600 tons of wasted food that go to the landfills every day.”
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Tags: · Food, John DeFore, Los Angeles, Organic Waste, Recycle & Reuse
Focus your recycling efforts at the office
September 20th, 2008 · No Comments
From SandersSays

Yesterday, I was at the Fox Business Channel’s studio to tape an interview for “Money For Breakfast”.
I noticed this recycling bin, filled with dead 9 volt batteries. This is the way to do it! Studios use a lot of devices (audio, etc.) that require 9 volts. Too often, they are thrown away, and make their way into landfills where they are quite toxic as they decompose.
One of the studio guys told me that they send all of this to a dedicated service that recycles them. This is proper disposal AND the right way to approach recycling. Too often, you’ll see plastic bottles, paper and batteries in the same bin.
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Tags: · Office, Recycle & Reuse, TimSandersBlog
Books to bud vases
September 16th, 2008 · No Comments
By John DeFore
Though bibliophiles instinctively recoil at the idea, the fact is that some books are good for nothing: outdated science texts, surplus copies of bestsellers everyone owns, current-events hack jobs by disreputable writers looking to make a quick buck. If you can’t even give a book away, what’s to be done with it?
While it is possible to recycle old books, you likely can’t do it in your curbside bin: The glues and binding materials don’t play well with the machines used by most municipal programs. If you’re graduate designer Laura Cahill, you make furniture out of them.
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Tags: · Art Objects, Books, Home Decor, Laura Cahill, Recycle & Reuse
The "Go Green Initiative" helps teachers, parents and kids green their campus
September 12th, 2008 · No Comments
By Kelly Rondeau
It’s back to the books for kids across America and going green in the classroom has never been so easy. With the help of a popular program called the Go Green Initiative, teachers have quick and simple access online to all the tools and resources needed to green a classroom, an entire school, or even a school-district.
Serving as the charter and flagship school for the Go Green Initiative, Walnut Grove Elementary School, in Pleasanton, Calif., first found out about the program in 2002 when Jill Buck, a mother of three, and PTA president, got creative and began asking “What else could we do to go green?”
“The school was doing some gardening, composting and recycling, but I wanted to do more, so I sat down at my kitchen table and started writing up the initiative,” said Ms. Buck (pictured left). “That was in 2002, and since then the program has just grown and grown: we’re now operating in all 50 states in the US, we’re in 13 countries, and on 4 continents; our website gets over 2 million hits a month; it’s an amazing program. Schools are finding us on the Internet and simply by word of mouth.”
Walnut Grove’s principal, Bill Radulovich, comments, “It all started here on my campus, as Jill (Buck) was my PTA president. As the charter school for this program, she first starting designing ideas to partner with waste management to help us with recycling waste, and that grew into networking and working with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) funds that are distributed to different programs.
“Where once we had cardboard boxes to hold are recycling items, we now have huge 55-gallon gobblers, these huge barrels with slots that are really cool. She helped us gain more methods in the form of recycling and reusing and how to be more efficient overall.”
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Tags: · Composting, Go Green Initiative, Green Schools, Jill Buck, Pleasanton, Recycle & Reuse
Houston Aims To Improve Its Recycling Rates
September 11th, 2008 · No Comments
By Julie Bonnin
When Houston made headlines for abysmal recycling rates last month, it dealt a blow to the work Mayor Bill White has been doing to improve the city’s environmental reputation. White, who was Deputy Director of the U. S. Energy Department under President Bill Clinton, has pushed to clean up the city’s environmental record, with victories such as special recognition for the city’s commitment to development of a solar infrastructure (from DOE this past spring), and its designation as the nation’s top municipal purchaser of green power (from the Environmental Protection Agency).
But there may yet be hope for turning Houston a deeper shade of green. Weeks after being called the worst recycler of the country’s 30 major metropolitan areas, city officials have announced their intention to launch an ambitious pilot program that involves the latest in “single stream” recycling.
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Tags: · Compost, Houston, Kingwood, Recycle & Reuse
Study Shows Auto Buyers Are Gas Wise

By Tom Kessler
Almost 90 percent of the car shoppers who visit Kelley Blue Book’s Web site say they are concerned about the future of our environment, company research shows. Among survey respondents, 80 percent agreed that individuals should make lifestyle changes to help reduce CO2 emissions. And 75 percent of KBB shoppers reported that they have made changes to further the betterment of the environment. The most frequent lifestyle changes cited were:
- recycling (54 percent)
- cutting back on driving (46 percent)
- purchasing a fuel-efficient car (31 percent)
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Tags: · Autos, Fuel-efficient cars, Kelley Blue Book, Recycle & Reuse
Harris Poll Shows Americans Are Making Green Changes
But Some Confused About Eco-Choices
By Barbara Kessler
Ever wonder what your neighbors are doing on the green front – what with one fellow dragging four nicely sorted recycling bins to the curb every other week, and another seemingly sitting out the green movement?
So did the Nature Conservancy and the people running the Harris Poll. They collaborated on a poll that found about half of Americans (53 percent) are making green changes, but a significant number ( 34 percent) said they’ve not made any changes because they are confused about what to do. Another large group (29 percent) said they are not making changes because it won’t make any difference.
Education seemed to play a role in who was confused, fatalistic or moving toward more sustainable practices. Just under half of high school educated respondents (46 percent) said they had made green changes as compared with college educated adults (65 percent).
Of the total 53 percent who had made changes, the poll elicited these responses:
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Tags: · buy local, Carpool, carpooling, driving less, Harris Poll, Local Food, Pay bills online, Recycle & Reuse, reusable bags
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