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Is recycling worth it?

04-Aug-2000


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Dear Cecil:

I recently read a commentary that most recycling programs are a waste. Among the points noted were: no shortage of landfill space (another thousand years of garbage would only fill an area 35 miles square by 100 yards deep), double energy consumption and pollution (just preparing the recyclables can use as much energy and create as much waste as using virgin material), and cost (most recycling programs lose money). So, Cecil, we need a straight answer. Are our weekly green-inspired trips to the curb a bust or not? --Jack Heiden, Albuquerque, New Mexico

Cecil replies:

Been giving this some thought lately. Here's what I've got so far: (1) Yeah, recycling is stupid. A lot of it, anyway. (2) You still should do it. Go a distance with me on this, it'll all come clear in the end.

The commentary you read sounds like it was based on "Recycling Is Garbage," a controversial 1996 article in the New York Times Magazine by contrarian John Tierney (www.nrdc.org/cities/recycling/rec yc/appenda.asp). Tierney's thesis: "Mandatory recycling programs aren't good for posterity. They offer mainly short-term benefits to a few groups--politicians, public relations consultants, environmental organizations, waste-handling corporations--while diverting money from genuine social and environmental problems. Recycling may be the most wasteful activity in modern America: a waste of time and money, a waste of human and natural resources."

The article attracted wide notice and was parroted by conservative columnists around the country. It also provoked a spirited defense of recycling by environmental groups, notably Environmental Defense (www.edf.org/pubs/Newslett er/1996/sep/o_recycl.html) and the National Resources Defense Council (www.nrdc.org/cities/recycling/recy c/recyinx.asp). To cover the points raised in your letter:

Case in point: grass clippings. For decades Americans simply bagged this stuff and threw it in the garbage with the coffee grounds. Then, in response to the (apparent) landfill crisis, some jurisdictions banned landscape debris from city garbage pickups. Lo and behold, some genius invented the mulching lawn mower, which chopped clipped grass into tiny bits and deposited the unnoticeable result on the lawn. (I've got one, works like a charm.) Poof--a major waste disposal issue simply disappeared.

All that having been said, the fact that something can be recycled doesn't mean it should be. Forget the esoteric arguments about externalities, finite resources, and so on--in the end recycling will (or won't) work because it is (or isn't) cheaper than throwing stuff away. This varies with the material being recycled. As a general proposition, any manufactured product that is (a) heavy or expensive in relation to its bulk, (b) homogeneous, and (c) easily separable from the waste stream by consumers can be recycled economically. Metals, notably steel and aluminum, are the obvious examples; both have high recycling rates. Surprisingly, so does newsprint. The poor candidates, at the moment, are plastics and mixed paper (including magazines). Plastics are too light and heterogeneous, while mixed paper contains too many contaminants. In the end we may conclude that this junk is best consigned to landfills. But given the advance of technology, who knows? We're in the midst of a great national experiment, and we'd be foolish at this stage to prejudge the results.

--CECIL ADAMS

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Cecil Adams can deliver the Straight Dope on any topic. Write Cecil at the Chicago Reader, 11 E. Illinois, Chicago 60611, or E-mail him at cecil@chicagoreader.com.

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