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7 benefits of Recycling

Now more than ever it is important to ensure we are all reducing the amount of waste we produce, as our oceans begin to fill with plastic and new landfill sites are needed to be sourced, scouring the view of our cities and countryside.

We at tap-in have pledged that throughout 2022, 75% of our waste will be recycled, with the aim to increase that number throughout 2023.

As a country we need to vastly improve our recycling habits, the UK government has announced a target to recycle 65% of municipal waste by 2035. England, Scotland and wales failed to meet the EU target of 50% by 2020 – showing an aggressive change of tact from the government is necessary for us to reach this attainable target.

 

Conserving Natural Resources.

  • Recycling paper and wood saves trees and forests. Yes, you can plant new trees, but you can't replace virgin rainforest or ancient woodlands once they're lost. 
  • Recycling plastic means creating less new plastic, which is definitely a good thing, especially as it's usually made from fossil fuel hydrocarbons.
  • Recycling metals means there's less need for risky, expensive and damaging mining and extraction of new metal ores.
  • Recycling glass reduces the need to use new raw materials like sand – it sounds hard to believe, but supplies of some types of sand are starting to get low around the world.

Protecting ecosystems and wildlife

  • Recycling reduces the need to grow, harvest or extract new raw materials from the Earth.
  • That in turn lessens the harmful disruption and damage being done to the natural world: fewer forests cut down, rivers diverted, wild animals harmed or displaced, and less pollution of water, soil and air. 
  • And of course if our plastic waste isn't safely put in the recycling, it can be blown or washed into rivers and seas and end up hundreds or thousands of miles away, polluting coastlines and waterways and becoming a problem for everyone. 

Reducing demand for raw materials

  • The world's increasing demand for new stuff has led to more of the poorest and most vulnerable people (for example, those living around forests or river systems) being displaced from their homes, or otherwise exploited. Forest communities can find themselves evicted as a result of the search for cheap timber and rivers can be damned or polluted by manufacturing waste.
  • It's far better to recycle existing products than to damage someone else's community or land in the search for new raw materials.

Saving energy

Making products from recycled materials requires less energy than making them from new raw materials. Sometimes it's a huge difference in energy. For example:

  • Producing new aluminium from old products (including recycled cans and foil) uses 95% less energy than making it from scratch. For steel it's about a 70% energy saving.
  • Making paper from pulped recycled paper uses 40% less energy than making it from virgin wood fibres. 
  • The amount of energy saved from recycling one glass bottle could power an old 100-watt light bulb for 4 hours and a new low-energy LED equivalent for a lot longer.

Cutting climate-changing carbon emissions

Because recycling means you need to use less energy on sourcing and processing new raw materials, it produces lower carbon emissions. It also keeps potentially methane-releasing waste out of landfill sites. 
Reducing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases being emitted into the atmosphere is vital for stopping disastrous climate change.

Cheaper than waste collection and disposal
Lambeth council in London pointed out that "it is 6 times cheaper to dispose of recycled waste than general refuse." So, the more you recycle, and the less you put in the bin, the more money is saved, which should be good for households, businesses and local public services.

Recycling food waste and green waste is a great idea too, often generating lots of valuable compost that can be used to grow more food and other crops. 

Tackles youth unemployment 

The coronavirus pandemic has caused devastation in all areas of our lives, including employment. There are over 500,000 young people aged 16-24 out of work, and numbers are expected to grow substantially with the end of the furlough scheme. 
Instead of propping up declining, polluting industries, the government must future-proof livelihoods by investing in more green jobs.

Right now, younf people are being taught and given careers advise on jobs that may not even exist in 10 years time. We're setting them up to fail where we could be training them to succeed.








 

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