May 15, 2018 ROANOAKE, VA – To recycle or not recycle – that is the question.
And, it’s a loaded question. It’s not as easy as you think and some of the things people are throwing in their blue bins are contributing to tons of recyclables being rejected, and sent to a landfill instead.
We all want to do our part – and Recycling & Disposable Solutions (RDS) is here to help.
Here’s what you need to know:
- As of March 1, the recycling game has changed.
- China receives most of the U.S.’s recyclables and there is a new threshold on acceptable limits of contaminants.
- Limits were at 3 to 7 percent and are now 0.5 percent.
“Even at 1 percent, it would be almost impossible to meet that standard,” said Joe Benedetto, president of RDS, a Roanoke recycling company. “This means there literally could be tons of recyclables returned to the U.S. with no options other than being put in a landfill.”
According to the recycling institute, the U.S. exported more than 21.5 million tons of recovered paper and fiber, valued at more than $3.1 billion last year. More than half of the total exported – about 14 million tons – went to China, according to the Washington-based American Forest and Paper Association, a trade group.
China then uses the recyclables to make the cardboard boxes that package computers, televisions, and appliances, many of which, are shipped back to the U.S.
Enter project “Green Fence,” a Chinese program launched to clamp down on recyclable contamination. The new threshold means if a cargo container has anything out of order – such as a pizza box with food in it, even if it is some cheese stuck to the lid – the entire container would be returned to the U.S. and the recycling facility’s expense. This is a massive fee to the company, possibly five or six times what it cost to send.
Where does that leave us?
Benedetto, a third-generation member of the recycling industry, offers some quick tips on making sure your recycling materials pass muster.
For the Recycle Bin | Toss it in the Garbage |
---|---|
Newspapers | Plastic Bags |
Aluminum Beverage Cans | Food Waste |
Cardboard | Electronics |
Glass Bottles | Styrofoam |
Junk mail | Bubble wrap |
Cereal Boxes | Wood |
Plastic bottles (#’s 1&2 only) | Yard clippings |
Steel & tin cans | Paint cans |
Glass Jars | Plastic & Metal Toys |
Aluminum Foil | |
Cat Food Cans | |
Shredded Paper |
About RDS
Benedetto is a 35-year veteran of the paper industry, having worked in or around recycling facilities all of his life. His experiences took him all over the United States, Canada, Mexico, South America and Europe. As the president of RDS, he says our goal is to design a custom solution to help customers get the most out of their waste management while being environmentally responsible. RDS serves industrial, commercial, retail or wholesale businesses as well as the private sector or municipalities. RDS creates specific programs for each client, inside a building or out, install needed equipment, then implement and monitor each individual plan.