Initially designed for military and civil security use for emergency lighting, glow sticks have purposes as diverse as tenting lights and night-fishing lures. Yet, you’ll
Tag: How To Recycle
Recycling Mystery: Headphones, Earbuds, and Chargers
Headphones, earbuds, and chargers have develop into important equipment for many people. Because we undergo so many of those equipment, they’ll add as much as
Is Shredded Paper Recyclable?
Here at Earth911, we’re usually requested, “Is shredded paper recyclable?” The reply is, “Yes, however … .” Paper consists of fibers. The longer the fiber,
Keeping Recycling Workers Safe and How You Can Help
Recycling helps us cut back waste and reuse invaluable assets. By minimizing the necessity to extract or mine new supplies in addition to the waste
Earth911 Podcast: EPAM’s Dan Smythe on Sustainability and Consumer Influence
Dan Smythe, vice chairman of retail and hospitality at EPAM Continuum, an influential expertise and enterprise technique consultancy, discusses the findings of the Consumers Unmasked
Earth911 Podcast: Learning From California’s Composting Law With World Centric’s Erin Levine
Erin Levine, useful resource restoration supervisor at World Centric, a Rohnert Park, Calif.-based producer of 100% compostable tableware and meals packaging, joins Mitch Ratcliffe to
Earth911 Podcast: Meet Kid-Powered RecycleMyBattery.org
Rayansh Bhavit is a member of Edison, N.J.-based RecycleMyBattery.org, a youth-led program that has collected 150,000+ batteries for recycling. Rayansh lately contributed an Earth911 article
Retailers Recycling Your Clothes for You
From an environmental standpoint, the style trade is carrying a really unhealthy look. Globally, 40 million tons of textiles are sent to landfills or incinerated
Make Feb. 18 Your Day To Recycle Batteries
Rayansh Bhavit determined to be an environmentalist within the second grade. He began serving to run a community of battery recycling drop-boxes which have recovered
Can You Recycle Number 5 Plastics?
Recycling isn’t the identical because it was. Just a few years in the past, China accepted a lot of the world’s plastic, textile, and paper