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Recycling Did You Know...
Each ton of recycled paper can save 17 trees, 380 gallons of
oil, three cubic yards of landfill space, 4,000 kilowatts of
energy and 7,000 gallons of water!
Americans use more than 67 million tons of paper per year, or
about 580 pounds per person.
Paper products make up the largest part (approximately 40 percent)
of our trash.
Making recycled paper instead of new paper uses 64 percent less
energy and uses 58 percent less water.
Every day American businesses generate enough paper to circle
the earth 20 times !
Every day Americans recover more than 2 million pounds of paper!
That's about 40 percent of the paper we use.
Paper products use up at least 35 percent of the world's annual
commercial wood harvest.
The highest point in Ohio is said to be "Mount Rumpke," which
is a "mountain" made up of trash -- at a sanitary landfill!
Rumpke is one of the nation's largest waste and recycling companies.
One tree can filter up to 60 pounds of pollutants from the air
each year.
Each year, Americans throw away 25 trillion Styrofoam cups.
In Britain, over 9 million "nappies" or disposable
diapers, are used every day.
More than 1/3 of all fiber used to make paper comes from recycled
paper.
Every Sunday, Americans waste 90 percent of recyclable newspapers.
This wastes 500,000 trees!
A new landfill generally costs more than an old one that has
filled up. This is because it typically costs more to comply
with new environmental regulations, to buy the land, to construct
the landfill and to transport waste because new landfills generally
are farther away than older ones.
Every year more than 900 million trees are cut down to provide
raw materials for American paper and pulp mills.
Only 1 percent of the world's water supply is usable; 97 percent
is in the ocean and 2 percent is frozen.

Why Recycle - Five Good Reasons
Recycling conserves our valuable natural resources.
Recycling saves energy.
Recycling saves clean air and clean water.
Recycling saves landfill space.
Recycling can save money and create jobs.
How Recycled Paper Is Made...
Waste paper is collected, sorted, baled and transported to a
paper recycling plant. You can help by sorting paper and keeping
it dry and out of the sun (water and sunlight make it harder
to remove ink).
At the paper factory, used paper is mixed with water in a huge
blender called a "hydrapulper," which mixes the paper
with water, pulling inks away from the paper fibers and separating
the fibers themselves. De-inking chemicals are sometimes also
added.
The pulp mixture passes through several different-sized screens,
which separate the paper fibers from paper clips, staples and
other contaminants.
In most cases, the clean pulp is then mixed with some new wood
pulp to make the recycled paper stronger. Recycled paper fibers
get shorter the more often they are recycled. Most fibers can
be recycled
The clean pulp is pressed into sheets, dried, finished and placed
onto rolls.
Recycling Around the World
People are making efforts all over the world to recycle and
take better care of our planet.
In Bristol, England, for example, they have a "Waste Not" Festival,
where you could guess how many aluminum cans had been crushed
into a brick, hear "Cycler the Robot" sing the Reduce-Reuse-Recycle
Rap and create art from items in a "Scrapstore."
A neighborhood recycling group there passed out leaflets and
stickers with a catchy earth-friendly slogan: "Before You
Bin It, Think What's In It!" Try to come up with your own
catchy phrases to help you remember to recycle.
Another group has installed picnic tables and seats made from
recycled plastics at a neighborhood park. They are also building
a mosaic walkway out of broken crockery and reclaimed tiles.
If you stop in at Ben & Jerry's for an ice cream cone, you'll
find a brochure called "Ben & Jerry's Thoughts On Dioxin." It
talks about how the ice cream containers at Ben & Jerry's
are made with unbleached paper. The paper bleaching process can
produce dioxin, a dangerous toxic chemical. Ben & Jerry's
has developed its new carton from unbleached brown (kraft) paperboard,
which can be made from recycled paper fibers.
Battery-maker Duracell built its new international headquarters
using materials from its own waste. More than half of the building
materials contained waste material from the company's own manufacturing
process. This included flooring made from crushed glass and broken
light bulbs, ceiling tiles made from recycled newspapers and
roofing from recycled aluminum.
Look on the bottom of your cereal box to see if it's made from
recycled paper. Kellogg's Froot Loops, for instance, come in
a box made from 100 percent recycled paperboard. You can also
get cereal, often for less money, in bags that have no box. Quaker
Oats, for example, sells its bagged cereals for 35-40 percent
below the price of boxed cereals.
And at Disney's new Animal Kingdom in Orlando, Florida, there
are brightly colored recycling bins throughout the park (photo
bottom). Imagine what a difference that is making among the
waste typically generated by their millions of guests.

Asked about recycling efforts at the Disney parks, Joan Manangu,
Executive Offices at Walt Disney World Resort, writes:
"Regrettably, we are unable to provide you with a date
as to when our Recycling Program began. However, our Company
created a department called Environmental Initiatives. This department
was created in 1994 to identify environmental initiatives around
the Walt Disney World Resort.
"The first recyclable bins were placed in the Magic Kingdom
Park in 1996. The approximate figures for the monthly total of
items recycled in the month of March 1999 at Disney's Animal
Kingdom Park are listed below.
28.9% of Class Waste (trash, paper, & food waste) was recycled.
42.8% of Class III (manure, yard waste, & construction waste)
was recycled."
If you pay attention, you'll begin to notice recycling efforts
all around you!
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