All Content from Business Insider 10月15日 00:48
美国回收标准不一,了解哪些物品可回收
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在美国,回收标准因地而异,常让人困惑。错误的回收或污染物品会破坏整个回收流程。部分物品需要自行送至特定地点回收。本文列举了包括气雾罐、电池、零食包装袋、陶瓷、咖啡胶囊、尿布、电子垃圾、充气玩具、灯泡、医疗废弃物、纸巾、药瓶、油腻披萨盒、塑料袋、塑料瓶盖和泡沫塑料在内的16种通常难以或无法在路边回收的物品,并提供了相关建议。了解您所在社区的回收规定至关重要,以避免污染并确保可回收物品得到妥善处理。

🌍 **各地回收标准差异大**: 美国全国存在数千种不同的回收标准,因为先进的自动化分拣系统成本高昂,许多社区缺乏资源。这导致路边回收箱的物品界定非常复杂,容易造成“希望式回收”(wish-cycling),即随意丢弃不确定是否可回收的物品,从而污染整个回收流。因此,用户必须主动查询当地市政部门的回收指南,了解其设备能力。

⚠️ **常见不易回收物品及其原因**: 许多日常物品因材质复合、体积过小、易污染或含有危险物质而难以回收。例如,多层复合材质的零食包装袋、含有电池的电子产品、陶瓷、咖啡胶囊(易穿透分拣网)、一次性尿布、含有汞的旧式灯泡、医疗锐器、油腻的披萨盒、缠绕机器的塑料袋和薄膜、以及难以分离的泡沫塑料。这些物品若不当处理,可能损坏设备、污染其他可回收物,或对环境和工作人员造成危害。

💡 **特殊物品的处理建议**: 对于难以进行路边回收的物品,有多种替代处理方式。如电池可查找Call2Recycle合作零售点;部分电子垃圾可送至专门的电子垃圾回收点或参加零售商的回收计划;塑料袋可在超市的回收箱投放;部分品牌包装可通过How2Recycle项目在指定零售点回收;医疗废弃物可通过Safe Needle Disposal等机构处理。此外,许多物品如陶瓷、充气玩具等,建议优先考虑重复使用或捐赠。

🔄 **明确分类与源头减量**: 提高回收效率的关键在于用户对回收规则的清晰了解和准确分类。对于塑料制品,应关注树脂识别码(RIC),并确认当地接收的塑料类型。同时,减少一次性用品的使用,如使用可重复使用的购物袋和餐具,也是减轻回收系统压力的重要途径。即使是看似可回收的物品,如纸巾或未完全清洁的披萨盒,也可能因纤维短或食物污染而被视为垃圾。

📍 **利用资源查找回收点**: 面对复杂的回收规定,可以利用Earth911等回收查找工具,找到特定物品的正确处理地点。对于特殊废弃物,如电子产品、电池、灯泡等,可以查询当地政府网站或咨询相关企业,了解是否有专门的回收计划或收集点。一些公司如TerraCycle提供付费的特殊回收服务,以处理普通回收系统无法处理的物品。

Recycling standards vary widely across the US, which can make it confusing to know what your city will pick up and what you need to drop off yourself.

Many of us have been guilty of "wish-cycling" — tossing just about every piece of paper, plastic, metal, or glass in the blue bin because it should be recyclable.

Unfortunately, recycling is more complicated than that.

What belongs in curbside recycling bins varies widely in the US. "There are literally thousands of recycling standards across the country," Rajesh Buch, a professor at Arizona State University, where he teaches a course on sustainable business, told Business Insider.

That's, in part, because recycling systems that can sort through piles of discarded items can cost tens of millions of dollars. "In most communities," he said, "they don't have the resources to have these fully loaded, full-capacity systems."

Conflicting standards can be confusing, but dumping every container or scrap can contaminate the waste stream, Buch said. The EPA's estimate put recycling's contamination rate at 25%.

Therefore, it's necessary to check with your municipality to see the types of recyclables it's equipped to handle. Earth911 has a recycling locator that can help you find where to dispose of certain recyclables, or you can pay a company like TerraCycle to do the work for you.

That said, there are some items that almost always need to go in the garbage or a special recycling facility.

1. Aerosol cans
Some locations accept aerosol cans for recycling, but you'll want to make sure they're empty.

Aerosol cans are metal with plastic caps, which should be recycled separately. Some recyclers accept the cans but others don't.

You'll want to make sure they're empty if you are able to recycle them, especially if the cans contained chemicals.

"Some of these are dangerous to put in the blue bin," Buch said.

2. Batteries
Energizer batteries are on display at a Wal-Mart store in Chicago.

Some cities, like Seattle, have barred people from throwing batteries in the trash because they can cause chemical leaks and fires. Batteries usually can't be recycled curbside, either.

Instead, a battery recycling facility needs to take them, Buch said.

If you want to recycle them, you can find retail locations willing to take batteries on the site Call2Recycle.

3. Chip bags and other snack wrappers

Chip bags, granola bar wrappers, and other snack packages are often multi-layered materials, Buch said.

"You've got foil on the outside," he said. "You've got a plastic coating on the inside, and that's not recyclable."

The machines aren't able to separate the layers, he said.

Some brands' packaging is recyclable through How2Recycle, though you'll have to drop it off at a participating grocery store or retailer.

4. Coffee mugs and other ceramics
Reuse or donate old mugs if you can because ceramics are difficult to recycle.

There isn't good technology to recycle ceramics, Buch said. They can even damage equipment.

The same is true for heat-resistant glass used to make items like baking dishes.

5. Coffee pods
50 billion coffee pods get made yearly

Over the years, coffee companies have made their pods more environmentally friendly by switching to a different type of recyclable plastic. But you still can't just toss them in your recycling right out of the machine.

"The foil is recyclable," Buch said. "The plastic is recyclable." But you have to remove the foil top from the plastic cup. As with all other recycling, it should be clean and dry.

Even when properly separated, though, the pods can be what Buch calls a "nuisance item." They're so small that they often fall through slots or holes in sorting machines instead of getting recycled.

"Anything that's two inches or smaller is going to fall out of the sorting system," Buch said.

There are still ways to recycle some pods, though. Nescafe accepts pods you return to them, for example.

6. Diapers

Disposable diapers are difficult to recycle "even if you didn't have all the poop inside," Buch said. They contain a variety of materials, like plastic and cellulose.

Some recycling companies like TerraCycle might take them, but municipal facilities most likely won't.

7. E-waste
A worker dismantles old computers and electronics at E-Parisara, an electronic waste recycling factory.

Cellphones, printers, and computers contain plastic, metal, and a mix of other materials that make them poorly suited for standard recycling systems.

Many cities have separate facilities where you can drop your e-waste off, or you might be able to schedule a special pickup. For example, if you have a coffee maker that's gone kaput, a retailer like Staples might recycle it and other small appliances for free.

8. Inflatable pools and toys
Children in Los Angeles swim in an inflatable pool.

In 2018, the US generated 35.7 million tons of plastic waste and only recycled about 9% of it, according to the EPA's most recent estimates. Because there are so many different kinds of plastics, it can be difficult to know what you can and cannot throw in your blue bin.

Many plastic containers have a little symbol on them, recycling arrows with a number in the center. This is what's known as a resin identification code.

Most recycling facilities accept empty, clean, dry number 1 or 2 plastic. Some locations accept numbers 1 through 7, while others won't take number 3, 6, or 7. It's best to check before you chuck your plastic in the bin.

PVC, which is number 3, is used to make inflatable pool toys, faux leather, and other goods and is very difficult to recycle.

9. Light bulbs
Manager Nick Reynoza holds a 100-watt incandescent light bulb at Royal Lighting in Los Angeles, Jan. 21, 2011. New federal rules governing the energy efficiency of lighting systems went into full effect Tuesday, effectively ending the sale and manufacture of bulbs that trace their origin to an 1880 Thomas Edison patent.

There are many types of light bulbs, from CFLs to LEDs. It's important to figure out what type you have before tossing it because many municipalities have different rules about where they go.

"Some of the old light bulbs even have mercury or other kinds of chemicals in them, like fluorescent light bulbs," Buch said. You may have to take them to your local hazardous waste collection site.

Some hardware stores will take certain types of bulbs, and Batteries Plus accepts a wide variety, including LEDs, incandescent bulbs, and fluorescent tubes.

10. Medical waste
Syringes and other sharp medical devices can injure workers at waste and recycling facilities.

Needles, syringes, and other sharp medical products can injure workers at waste and recycling facilities. Some locations have drop boxes or other collection sites that take them.

Safe Needle Disposal offers lists of disposal locations by state as well as mail-in services, which often require a fee.

11. Napkins and paper towels
Even clean paper towel and napkins can't be recycled.

You may know that you only used a paper towel to dry your hands, but the recycling facility doesn't. They have to assume it could have been covered in food, grease, or even something hazardous.

"Those things become contaminated waste in the blue bin," Buch said.

Plus, the fibers in these paper products are too short to get recycled.

12. Prescription pill bottles
Pills spilling out of prescription bottle - stock photo

As with coffee pods, some prescription pill bottles, and their lids, are small enough to fall through sorting machines and won't be recycled.

"There might be some communities where they don't take the pill bottle and other communities where they do," Buch said.

13. Greasy pizza boxes
As long as your pizza box isn't too greasy, you should be able to recycle it.

Cardboard is one of the most recycled materials in the US, but over half of what's tossed still ends up in landfills, according to a 2019 estimate.

While most pizza boxes are made of cardboard, they're also often greasy. "Sometimes the cardboard has cheese stuck to it, so now you've got cardboard with food, so it's contaminated," Buch said.

Some facilities will still take the boxes if they're not too dirty.

14. Plastic bags and bubble wrap
Plastic bags get tangled in recycling machines, which is why you can't put them in your curbside bin.

Plastic bags and film and bubble wrap can cause serious problems for recycling equipment, acting a bit like hair caught around a vacuum roller brush.

"Plastic film stretches and becomes literally filament-like," Buch said. "It gets wrapped around inside these sorting systems."

Many grocery stores have collection boxes for plastic bags.

15. Loose plastic bottle tops
ISTANBUL, TURKEY - MARCH 12: A pile of plastic bottles are seen after sorting at the Odayeri Recycling and Compost Waste Facility on March 12, 2018 in Istanbul, Turkey. Istanbul's three main waste management facilities process over 18,500 tonnes of waste each day servicing the cities population of over 15million people. Since 2007 Istanbul's municipality introduced technology enabling the cities waste to be transformed into electricity and now produces 389,000 MegaWatts of electricity annually, providing electricity to over 300,000 households and is now the largest provider of waste converted electricity in Europe. In 2011 automated separation and recycling technology was introduced across the three main waste centers sorting recyclable materials and turning waste into compost to be reused across the cities parks and gardens. The Odayeri Recycling and Compost Waste Facility is the only facility in the world to provide integrated sorting facilities for plastics, metals and composting of organic and household waste, the facility produces 80 tons of compost per day. (Photo by Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Whether you should leave plastic tops on water bottles before recycling them varies between municipalities.

"The lid is made of a different material than the plastic bottle itself," Buch said, so they're recycled differently.

Many facilities can separate the cap and bottle. However, you'll still want to check with your local recycler because some require cap-free bottles.

16. Styrofoam

Many cities and states have banned Styrofoam food containers, but the substance still arrives in a lot of products and shipping packaging.

Styrofoam, also known as polystyrene, isn't recyclable in most curbside bins. Many cities have drop-off sites, though, they may only take certain types, like Styrofoam blocks.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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回收 美国 环保 垃圾分类 可持续发展 Recycling USA Environment Waste Management Sustainability
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