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Books
The Adventures of a Plastic Bottle: A Story About Recycling (Little Green Books)
The Adventures of a Plastic Bottle: A Story About Recycling (Little Green Books)
by Alison Inches
Our Price: $3.99
Used from: $0.50

Garbage and Recycling (Young Discoverers: Environmental Facts and Experiments)
Garbage and Recycling (Young Discoverers: Environmental Facts and Experiments)
by Rosie Harlow Sally Morgan
Our Price: $7.95
Used from: $3.65

Trash And Recycling (Usborne Beginners: Information for Young Readers: Level 2)
Trash And Recycling (Usborne Beginners: Information for Young Readers: Level 2)
by Stephanie Turnbull
Our Price: $4.99
Used from: $2.40

The Adventures of an Aluminum Can: A Story About Recycling (Little Green Books)
The Adventures of an Aluminum Can: A Story About Recycling (Little Green Books)
by Alison Inches
Our Price: $3.99
Used from: $1.00

Don't Throw That Away!: A Lift-the-Flap Book about Recycling and Reusing (Little Green Books)
Don't Throw That Away!: A Lift-the-Flap Book about Recycling and Reusing (Little Green Books)
by Lara Bergen
Our Price: $6.99
Used from: $0.58



Orange Grove Recycling And The Environment

The United States has been learning to successfully step up the amount of recycling it does as a whole. It has been shown that the country recycles over 24% of the waste it produces, which is the most recycling in the industrialized world. But it also produces the most waste of all of the industrialized countries. By learning how much orange grove recycling can do to benefit the environment as well as the economy, we can bring about a healthier world.

  

Orange grove recycling has done a great job as an industry; it provides jobs and helps economic development. In 2000 alone, it was responsible for a $37 billion yearly payroll and 1.1 million jobs. It worked out to producing 36 new jobs for every 10,000 tons of recycled waste. If that waste were to be incinerated instead of recycled, however, only one job would be created for that 10,000 tons. And for every employee that is working to collect recyclable items, there are 25 to turn these products into new, usable ones.

There are at least as many employees working for the recycling industry as there are in the industry of automobile and truck manufacturing. And it has been shown that the recycling industry is able to pay its employees more than other industries pay their workers. So there are many well-paying jobs available from making recycling a part of life.

Environmentally, recycling has proven to stabilize the global climate by limiting some of the emissions from greenhouse gases. These emissions are created by product manufacturing processes, the use of these products, and the disposal of them.

It is true that some amounts of these emissions are part of nature's processes, and they produce climate changes that are actually necessary for there to be life on earth, but in extreme amounts they can have a horrible effect on nature. Global temperatures may change, the sea level can change, and many other effects of climate change may occur. Making plastic, metal, paper, and glass products from recycled materials uses much less energy than using brand new materials, since recycled products have already been processed once. With virgin materials also, there will be a period of extraction and transporting the virgin metals in the product. This will take time and energy. Recycling plastics takes 60% less energy, and recycling steel takes 70% less energy than using raw materials to create these products.

It takes less energy to recycle almost any type of material, in fact. In 2005, recycling conserved over 900 trillion BTUs, which worked out to being the same amount of energy that nine million household use in one year. In the recycling process, fewer fossil fuels are burned, which means less carbon dioxide and fewer greenhouse gases are released.

Orange grove recycling can make a huge, positive effect on the earth as a whole, but the process always must start right in your own home.


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Recycle Computer Monitors Headlines

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State should root out e-waste program fraud - Modesto Bee


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Editorial: Recycling waste into fraud - OCRegister


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The program to collect and recycle computer monitors and televisions has paid out $320 million, but also has resulted in about $23 million in "faulty and ...
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California's pioneering e-waste program a model gone wrong - Sacramento Bee


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By paying more than $320 million to collect and recycle computer monitors and televisions, the state has built a magnet for fraud totaling tens of millions ...
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