Third step: Recycle (source: Minnesota Office of Environmental Assitance)

Recycling uses waste to make new products. Common recyclable materials are glass, paper, aluminum and steel. New technologies are making it possible to recycle other materials as well.

Recycling has become a standard practice among many Minnesotans, particularly as curbside pick-up programs have expanded to serve most communities. However, buying products that are recyclable and setting them out at the curb for collection is only part of the recycling process. We must also buy products that are made from recycled materials.

Recyclables are commodities like any raw materials. If there is demand for recycled materials in manufacturing, their value will go up and the prices paid to recyclers will be higher. Consumers can help keep that demand high by searching for and buying products made from recycled materials. In doing so, we help support the recycled materials market and guarantee the success of our recycling programs.


Buy products that can be recycled in your area and make sure to recycle them

If no system is in place in your community for you to recycle a certain type of material, that material is not recyclable. It has to be collected, reprocessed and manufactured into new products in order for recycling to be complete. Follow these suggestions for purchasing products that are recyclable or packaged in recyclable materials.

These items cause serious problems in the recycling of glass. The presence of any of these in a load of otherwise recyclable glass can cause the entire load of glass to be rejected, driving up the cost of recycling.


Buy products made out of recycled materials

Post-consumer material is something that someone has used and recycled, such as newspaper or plastic milk jugs. It is waste, and would normally be discarded after completing its useful life as a consumer item.

Some products or packages contain material that is recycled from mill scraps. This material has never been used by anyone, and is called pre-consumer material. Some industries, such as the recycled paper industry, have used pre-consumer material for many years and will continue to do so because they recognize it as a valuable resource.

Recycling mill scraps is good, but it doesn't help maintain consumer recycling programs or lessen the amount of discarded solid waste to be managed. It's important that manufacturers use post-consumer material and that consumers know that a product or package has post-consumer recycled content.

Increased demand for recycled products by consumers will help develop stable long-term markets for post-consumer materials. Look for and purchase products with labels that say they contain post-consumer material. For example, recycled paper products, now widely available, often have labels stating the percentage of recycled content.

Common items that may have post-consumer recycled content (look for labels on each of these products):


Labeling

Some labels advertise products as "environmentally friendly," "earth friendly," "environmentally improved," "biodegradable," or "recyclable." Currently these types of broad environmental claims are difficult to measure or compare. They are different from statements of recycled content, which list a percentage of recycled materials in the product or package.

It is not easy to know whether a broad claim is truthful or misleading. Some states have begun regulating words like "recyclable" and "biodegradable," but they do not agree on standard definitions of these terms. Discussions are under way among environmental groups, government and industry to set firmer rules that would be uniform across the country.

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