Posted on 09/22/2010 10:15:22 AM PDT by reaganaut1
The greenies tried that one already. They found out they had to use natural gas to generate enough heat to run the generator and burn the trash. Seems waste paper (read newsprint) was unable to burn hot enough. Funny.
The Germans managed to get that to work - the waste feed just has to include a certain amount of... plastic.
bump
melting sand is very cheap
Much recycling is just feel good nonsense. Much glass/plastic doesn’t get recycled and in fact ends up in the dump.
The most green action is to not use disposables, and to have a home composter.
Much recycling is just feel good nonsense. Much glass/plastic doesn’t get recycled and in fact ends up in the dump.
The most green action is to not use disposables, and to have a home composter.
Well that was enlightening :-) Funny how lots of us bought into that crap a few years back, isn’t it.
When our city went to recycling, I really resented being forced to have two huge, stinky trashcans cluttering up the garage. We didn’t have to accept the recyling can but we HAD TO pay for it.
If one accumulated enough warnings for putting non-recyclables in the recyclable can - they would remove the can would still bill for it, and a second “regular” garbage can was very expensive.
Glad I moved.
Not as cheap as heating water.
heating, washing , sterilizing etc. also some glass has lead or other chemicals to give it pigment that prohibit recycling.
Illustrated by the recent news (Not a joke) that a Lutheran ELCA seminary had a ritual of blessing for a compost bin. Case closed.
By the time you get that past the green weenies of the local EPA, you will have to spend hundreds of millions of dollars to make sure the incinerator is "clean." Way greener to just dump it in a landfill and scrape a foot of dirt over it.
Speaking of composting, my community collects cardboard in several dumpsters at one location. The cardboard rots until it can be ground into a mulch. The mulch is free. It’s the only recycling project I’ve seen really work.
No, because the truck rarely goes back to a plant. It generally goes to a warehouse where the bottles would have to be unloaded and then reloaded into another truck which would take it back to the plant. These trucks are rarely deadheading, they generally haul other things on the return trip.
They would have to assign part of their plant for bottle cleaning, buy special equipment to clean the bottles, use special chemicals to clean, buy more special equipment to inspect the bottles, higher liability insurance and so on. Since they buy the bottles rather then make them it is cheaper to buy them.
I know of a local dairy company that is using glass bottles for milk. Since they have a small specialize clientele reusing works for them. On a large scale it would add to your costs.
bump
I use a canvas bag to carry home my groceries rather than plastic bags. That is my sole contribution to the environment. Since I go to the store almost every day, I figure it’s good enough.
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