The Annual Plastic Recycling Awards. The Winners Are…
Plastic products have a bad reputation because some consumers simply forget, refuse, or don’t ever think to recycle them. Fortunately, this situation is beginning to turn around.
Nowadays, more and more people are taking it upon themselves to make sure all their recyclable plastic products make it to the next stage of processing.
Whether that means putting plastic refuse into the proper bin for weekly pickup or loading a few hundred items into the family car and making a trip to the local recycling plant, reusing plastic is the smart thing to do.
It’s important to know the basics of plastic pollution and recycling. Along with that, it helps us to know about some of the coolest and most interesting facts related to how the process of recycling plastic helps to create jobs, makes beautiful works of art, conserves natural resources, reduces the need for landfill space, and much more.
We’ve divided the following information into two sections. The first deals with the bare facts and statistics of plastic recycling, how plastics pollute oceans, and the economics of recycling plastic. The second is a more tongue-in-cheek look at some of the interesting factoids about plastic recycling and why it’s so important for communities to pay more attention to the environment.
Plastic Pollution, the Oceans, and the World Economy
Statistics About the State of Plastic Recycling
On a good day, only about 10 percent of all the plastic produced in the U.S. ever sees a second life as recycled materials. Who are the biggest culprits in plastic pollution? Shopping bags and cups are probably at the top of the list in most communities, and both are huge contributors to ocean pollution.
The bad news is that 90 percent of plastics are not recycled, and a large portion of those end up in the world’s seas, waterways, canals, lakes, and oceans. Why is this such a big deal, and what are the raw numbers behind the environmental catastrophe that plastic presents?
Consider the following. When plastic is not recycled and ends up in a landfill, you’ll be looking at a 100-year wait before it naturally decomposes. The U.S. EPA website explains that delineates the damage, noting that as of 2018, about 75 percent of all U.S. plastic products ended up in landfills, but only about 9 percent were recycled.
What about the rest, the other 16 percent? It was burned during special processes to create energy.
The reason it’s of paramount importance to recycle plastic is that by doing so, we greatly cut down on the consumption of energy that it takes to create brand-new plastic products. The news is not all bad. In fact, of all those millions of plastic bottles, something between 20 and 30 percent of them gets recycled, which is better than nothing.
On the other hand, the same can’t be said for plastic that is used to wrap and seal packages of all types. Of that category, less than 14 percent of the plastic ever reaches a recycling plant. And, while one state might not be representative of the entire U.S., California’s experience is informative. That state spends upwards of $26 million every year just to place discarded plastic products into landfills.
The Special Case of Plastic Ocean Pollution
If you think the situation on land is bad, take a look at how plastic pollution is affecting the world’s oceans. Every year, nearly five million metric tons of plastic waste make their way to the oceans. Where does it all come from? Mainly from discarded consumer items like shopping bags, straws, product packaging, and dozens of other human-made items that were never intended to find a home in the ocean.
What happens to plastic when it ends up in the ocean? Unfortunately, sea water works much faster than landfills to break down plastic. At first, that might seem like a good result, but it’s not. When ocean water breaks plastic waste down, it creates micro-plastics that find their way to seashores on every continent. In fact, one study revealed that within the next three decades, the ocean will contain, by weight, more plastic waste than there are fish.
The Economics of Plastic Recycling
In the U.S., residents in more than 60 percent of communities live within driving distance of a plastics recycling facility. That doesn’t mean all those people use the facilities, but at least having access is the first step toward a cleaner environment.
When you stop to think that nearly 360 million tons of plastic come off the production lines every year, it’s scary to wonder what the next few years hold for us if we don’t get more efficient with recycling the stuff.
Awards For Great Use of Plastics?
For some reason, there’s no awards event for people who do inspiring, clever, efficient, artistic, or genius-level work in the field of plastic recycling. But there should be, and if there were, the categories and winners would probably look like this:
Best Job-Creator
Recycling is responsible for as many as six times the number of jobs created compared to placing all the plastic into landfills.
Best Statistical Summary About How Much Plastic Gets Recycled
According to the EPA, about 3 million of the annual 35 million tons of plastic waste in the U.S. gets recycled.
Most Artistic Use of Recycled Plastic
Permanent sculptures that can be painted and chemically sealed so that they last for decades, even in outdoor sculpture gardens.
Best Short Explanation of How Plastic is Recycled
After sorting, shredding, and eliminating all impurities from raw plastic, the shredded debris is heated to the point of melting and formed into tiny pellets called nurdles. The nurdles can then be used as raw material to make virtually any new item from pure plastic.
Most Shocking Fact About Plastic Drinking Bottles
Each day, U.S. consumers use 60 million plastic drinking bottles, the vast majority of which are tossed directly into the trash. Fortunately, about 10 percent see new life as recycled products.
Best Rate of Recycling for Plastic Bottles
UK citizens are the winners of the plastic-bottle recycling race because they have the highest rate of reusing the items, with nearly 75 percent getting recycled.
Slowest Plastic Recycling Method for Plastic
The earth eventually recycles all plastic, but it takes approximately 450 years to completely decompose just a single bottle.
Best List of 10 Reasons to Recycle Plastic
- 1. Recycling, as opposed to manufacturing new plastic, conserves a significant amount of raw materials and natural resources and consumes far less energy.
- 2. Every piece of plastic that’s recycled is one less item in the landfill. Landfill space is not infinite and is better suited for other types of waste, particularly those kinds that are difficult or even impossible to recycle.
- 3. It reduces the use of fossil fuels, which are a major component in the production of new plastic. Oil is consumed during the manufacturing process of fresh plastic. As it is, most of the plastic that already exists is enough to fulfill all the needs of every human on earth, which means additional production could be fully replaced if we could achieve a 100 percent rate of plastic recycling.
- 4. Making greater numbers of people aware of how easy and beneficial it is to recycle plastic means a more sustainable lifestyle for everyone on the planet.
- 5. Recycling of anything, by definition, reduces waste. But, plastic is a special case because there is so much of it, and because it is so easy to recycle.
- 6. Greenhouse gas (GG) production is significantly reduced. When plastic is recycled, the process emits much lower levels of GG than the creation and manufacturing of fresh plastic.
- 7. Overall, the recycling of plastic, particularly drinking-water containers, saves energy by converting an already-produced object into a brand new product with very little energy input. For example, melting old plastic is a low-energy operation compared to plastic production from oil and other substances in the first generation cycle.
- 8. Plastic recycling is incredibly simple, from the first stage of collecting the used material to melting it down and using it to manufacture hundreds of different goods.
- 9. Recycling at the consumer level makes sense, saves people money, and is already something that has caught on in households and businesses. The main benefit is that something like a plastic bottle has dozens of clever, helpful uses. They’re ideal for storage, turning into planters, keeping in vehicle trunks as an emergency water carrier, and much more.
- 10. It reduces pollution by keeping additional substances from ecosystems. Every small piece of recycled plastic means that much less pollution. Fortunately, the rate of recycling is going up with each passing year as consumers discover how easy it is to recycle.
Best Songs That Use the Word “Plastic”
Plastic is Forever, Plastic Dracula, Plastic Man, Plastic Flowers on the Highway, Italian Plastic, Plastic People, Plastic California, Plastic Beach.
Honorable mention: Best Musical Act
John Lennon and the Plastic Ono Band
About Jennifer Hanzlick
Clutter Trucker is a Denver-based hoarding clean-out company founded by Jennifer Hanzlick. Jennifer leveraged 15 years of corporate experience in to start the company in 2008. Her mission is to help and educate individuals and their loved ones who have hoarding disorder. A featured speaker at Ted X Boulder, Jennifer works directly with community and non-profit organizations to boost public awareness about the condition. To that end, she founded the Colorado Hoarding Task Force in 2015.