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Recycling and its benefits
Per year, the average American now uses enough energy to release into the atmosphere about 50,000 pounds of carbon dioxide, the major contributor to global warming. People in the U.S. throw away enough aluminum every three months to rebuild our entire commercial air fleet. Aluminum takes 500 years to break down, but recycling one aluminum can saves enough electricity to run a TV for three hours. Every day, Americans churn out 3.5 pounds of garbage. If lined up bumper to bumper, a string of garbage trucks hauling the nation's daily waste could reach halfway to the moon.
The Basics of Recycling in Your Workplace…
Most recycling programs in office buildings consist of (1) collecting recyclable materials such as office papers, cardboard, glass and aluminum and (2) disposing them into the recycling bins at a loading dock or garbage pick-up area.
Any office trash containing discarded food products, sticky pads, or tape is considered non-recyclable, as is trash collected from restrooms and food service facilities.
Normally, someone in your office or building is assigned to oversee this process and ensure recyclables are disposed of properly. With our experience in this area, OneSource can help you plan, implement, communicate and monitor your program.
The recycling effort begins with the office tenants who take part in the program. Each person uses two trash containers, one for recyclables and the other for non-recyclables, OneSource personnel circulate the building also using two containers, to extract and keep the materials separate.
OneSource takes the trash containers to the garbage pick-up area where we are responsible for placing the recyclable and non-recyclable trash in their appropriate compactors/containers. Usually these are color coded: For example, blue containers are used for the collection of recyclable trash and black for the non-recyclable trash.
OneSource meets with you on a regular basis, so that our onsite project team can provide ongoing updates on the program.
When OneSource is part of your waste recycling efforts, your building is positioned to earn Materials and Resources Credit 5 under the LEED-EB Rating System. The intent of this credit is to reduce waste and toxins generated by building occupants and building operations that are hauled to and disposed of in landfills or incineration.
Adding other items to your recycling program - such as raw and mixed metals, plastics, batteries, fluorescent light bulbs, and plastics - furthers your cause. Collecting and recycling 95% of the batteries and fluorescent light bulbs used is a requirement for this credit. Documentation is also required for the percentage of diverted/recycled total waste stream, which is 30-50%, depending on the number of credits you choose to earn in this area.
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