Sweden is Now Recycling 99 Percent of its Trash. Here’s how


It would serve Americans greatly to take a page out of Sweden’s book about recycling their waste.

The Scandinavian nation of Sweden has set a new precedent in the world of recycling its trash, with a near zero waste amount of 99 percent. Sweden was already ahead of the game back in 2012, when they were recycling 96 percent of their trash, but the three percent jump in just two years is quite impressive. Image credit: sweden.media

How does Sweden do it? They have an aggressive recycling policy, which goes in an order of importance: prevention, reuse, recycling, recycling alternatives, and as a last resort, disposal in landfill. As of 2014, only 1 percent of their waste ends up in a landfill.

Swedes understand that producing less waste to begin with is key to reducing the amount of trash that ends up being thrown away. Something as simple as using reusable containers for water and drinks can greatly reduce the amount of trash each person produces per year.

They have a very advanced system of trash separation which makes it easy to recycle nearly everything that’s thrown away.

Much of the left over waste is taken care of by using “recycling alternatives”, such as the Waste-to-Energy program, which is explained in this video:

While the “recycling alternative” remains controversial, it’s cleaner than drilling for oil or natural gas to burn in traditional power plants.

Sweden is so good at recycling its trash in fact, that it now has plans to import 800,000 tons of garbage from other countries in Europe in order to create heat for its citizens through its Waste-to-Energy program.

America should take note of this process considering we only recycle approximately 34 percent of the garbage we throw away.

THE POWER OF RECYCLING: 5 ECO-FRIENDLY IDEAS TO A SIMPLER LIFE


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For the last couple of years I have been on the path of simplifying my life, slowly and gradually, one step at a time. It hasn’t been always easy or straightforward but definitely worth every single effort or pitfall. The core idea behind the philosophy of simple living is to live a more authentic and meaningful life with your bare essentials. In other words, having a fuller life with less stuff. Less stuff means a whole range of things – from knick knacks to valuables, gadgets you will dispose off after a few months, extra activities and commitments on your agenda, down to mental stuff as in thoughts and beliefs you shouldn’t carry around anymore. Simpler living is about letting go of stuff that doesn’t belong to your life purpose.

Following this philosophy directly or indirectly implies that you start living a more conscious and eco-friendly life. The reason is that you are less driven by unconscious habits or impulses and no longer following the mass consciousness lifestyle of over-consumerism and ego-based life choices. You turn the switch from ego to eco – the most remarkable shift you can ever do in your life.

When I take decisions, I now evaluate and put into consideration the eco-cost of it but from a more practical and simple way that is eco-friendly nonetheless. For example, the questions I ask myself are: “How can I adopt an eco-friendlier lifestyle without going through a lot of hassle and complications?” ; “What simple things can I change that make an impact and a difference to the environment and myself?”; “What can I do right now with the least money and the least work to make a change?”.

 

It turns out that these are quite a few simple things that one can do right now and which do not require a lot of time, effort or money. So what I am about to suggest is a simple lazy guide to do small but significant changes today – hassle free. You know when it gets really simple and easy then we do not have any excuses left to procrastinate with taking action.

Here are some ideas:

 

1. Simple Solar Power Solutions:

 

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Having solar energy feeding your home’s electrical demand is one of the cleverest ways to have clean, cheap and environment friendly energy. Although the capitalcosts of solar energy systemscan be of a key factor when deciding to go solar or not, when putting all the numbers on paper it turns out that the amount of cost-saving accrued over a certain period of time outbalances the initial costs of purchasing the system.

Moreover depending on your country and area, there are several companies nowadays selling solar energy systems and that can offer different pricing plans and financing options to suit your needs and budgets. Whichever the option, if you are a property owner, going solar will always return on your investment. It might take from a couple of years up to perhaps five years to get even on your initial costs – depending on your consumption and the power of the system you purchase. I know a lot of people who have installed enough photovoltaic panels to generate more than the power demands of their household and hence end up selling the surplus energy back to the grid leaving them with a credit rather than a debit on their utility bills.

Besides cost-saving and eco-friendliness, other benefits of going solar include becoming more independent and ultimately a step further in simplifying life overall.

 2. Selling your Used Smartphone or Tablet:

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I think that one of the greatest wastes and burden to the environment are consumer electronics because they have a limited lifespan after which we dispose of, creating white goods waste. People who want to always be on top of the current IT trend will change smartphone or tablet within two to three years on average. Collectively this creates a big need for recycling. A smart way of  ‘recycling’ consumer electronics is selling it to others who perhaps are not that keen on having the latest model but can happily live with a device that hasn’t the latest specs.

Technollo offers an easy and comprehensive system to sell your smartphone and tablet. You justsignup, list your device and price, receive the shipping kit and just sell! All orders have USPS option for shipping kit that are sent to you with prepaid label attached. You then simple get paid for your sale through Paypal after 24-48 hours or if you prefer via cheque.

3. Fast Composting in your Kitchen:

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Composting is the perfect example of recycling in action. The beauty of it is that the whole cycle is happening right in your home from the kitchen to the garden or pots. Creating compost is not a particularly difficult process – basically turning food scraps into something you can grow your plants into. Yet such a process can be simplified even further by using certain helpful tools. For instance I found this product – Green Recycler –  an award winning appliance the size of a coffee machine that sits right on top of  your kitchen top. It is designed to easily turn food scraps into compost ten times faster and in an eco-friendly way. It has easy clean-up components and can hold one gallon of shredded scraps. Find out more here

4. Renting Book Titles & Saving on Paper & Clutter:

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If you’re someone who reads a lot of fiction titles or have kids at home who love to read, you can end up with piles of books which are essentially piles of paper. The thing with fiction titles and children books is that they have less value on the shelf then say non-fiction titles or reference books since one rarely returns to the same book after reading it once. A convenient new approach, especially if it’s a hassle for you getting to the local library, is to rent them out. There are services such asBooksfree which essentially cater for this. Booksfree is like the Netflix for books. Subscribers can have access to more than 250,000 titles including children’s books and audiobooks and can daily rent them online.

5. Eco-Conscious Gifts:

 

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Gifts are something that we constantly give or receive throughout the year. There’s always an occasion that requires a gift – Birthdays, weddings, graduations, etc. Yet we can get smarter and eco-conscious when it comes down to choosing and buying gifts. To be honest I am not someone who is keen on choosing gifts – it’s not my forte – but when I do I try to choose something consciously. I hate the idea that gifts become an unconscious automated routine like just getting something from a shelf just for the sake of custom and social etiquette. If you have to buy a gift, choose it from the heart and if possible make sure it has little eco footprint. There are many places on the internet to but eco-friendly gifts. One suggestion is Gifts with humanitywhich sells fair trade and Eco-friendly stuff like accessories, clothing, jewelry, handbags and home decode among other things.

Norway uses waste as eco-friendly fuel


Forget coal, oil, shale gas, even nuclear. The bin bag – full of your household waste – is becoming one of Norway’s fuels of choice.

Try to imagine the smell when a bin lorry passes you on the street on a hot summer’s day. Breathe it in through your nostrils. Stinks, doesn’t it? Now multiply it by a thousand.

That’s what it is like inside the largest energy recovery facility in Norway, the Klemetsrud plant. A vast concrete hall of waste. Tens of thousands of tonnes of rubbish piled up. The conveyor belts clunk and clank as more pours in. Bin lorries reverse towards the chutes and tip out more plastic bags of waste.

A huge industrial claw swoops down, its pincers reaching round a tonne of rubbish, picking it up and transporting it to the other end of the hall, where it is dropped. A cloud of white dust builds, and soon fills the hall. It is not good to stay in here too long.

This is where the waste thrown out by millions of households from Norway, Britain and elsewhere is turned into heat and electricity for the city of Oslo.

Cheap heating

The rubbish is pre-sorted. Everything that can be recycled is meant to have been taken out, but even then they are still left with more than 300,000 tonnes a year.

They do not see it as waste here – they see it as energy.

“Four tonnes of waste has the same energy content as one tonne of fuel oil,” says the director of the waste-to-energy agency in Oslo, Pal Mikkelsen.

“That means a lot of energy, and we use very little energy to transport it.”

One tonne of fuel oil, Mr Mikkelsen says, could heat a house for half a year. In other words, take just part of an English bin lorry’s maximum load picked up on the streets of Leeds or Bristol, turn it into energy here – and you can heat a home in Oslo for half a year.

The process is simple. The waste, tonne by tonne of it, is dropped into an incinerator. It soars to 850 degrees. Peeking through a small porthole of toughened glass, the fire burns bright orange with a fierce roar of flames.

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Most of the waste is burned, but some can be recycled

Greener schools

Not everything is burned. Old tin cans and some mattress springs are left. At the end of the process they are left with ash, metal -which is recycled – and a lot of heat.

The heat boils water. The steam drives a turbine, which produces electricity. And the scalding water is piped off from the plant, to houses and public schools across Oslo.

Which means at Bjoernholt School the technical manager, Agnar Andersen, does not have to worry about fuel deliveries during the harsh Norwegian winter any more.

“We don’t have to think about fuel oils or fossil fuels. They are phasing out the last school this year with fossil fuels.”

At full capacity the plant will provide all the heat and electricity for Oslo’s schools and heat for 56,000 homes.

An environmentalist’s dream, you might have thought. Not necessarily, cautions the chair of Friends of the Earth Norway, Lars Haltbrekken.

“The overall goal from an environmental perspective should be to reduce the amount of waste, reuse what we can reuse, recycle, and then the fourth option is to burn it and use the energy.

“We have created such an overcapacity in these power plants in Norway and Sweden. We have made ourselves dependent on producing more and more garbage.”

Send us your rubbish

Norway waste-to-energy plant at Klemetsrud
 
Norway burns rubbish to get energy – and avoids resorting to landfill

Supporters disagree, and point out that, used together, all of Europe’s current waste-to-energy plants could only consume about 5% of the continent’s total annual landfill. Norway – they say – is actually helping to dispose of some of that waste in the best way possible.

That is certainly true in the case of the English cities Leeds and Bristol. Both export waste to Oslo. Rather than pay for it to go into landfill after the recyclable bits have been removed, they actually pay Oslo to take it off their hands.

So, Oslo is paid to dispose of the rubbish, and gets energy out of it as well.

The waste-to-energy revolution can also be heard on the streets of the Norwegian capital, as the number 144 bus rumbles past.

It is powered by biogas, created from the city’s decaying organic matter. One kilogramme of food waste produces half a litre of fuel. Use all of the organic waste they have and they will be able to power 135 buses year-round in Oslo.

If this whole project were repeated across Europe, Pal Mikkelsen believes it would make a huge difference.

“I think it would mean we get a lot better level of self-sustainability when it comes to energy. If it’s done properly it would also mean a lot more materials recovery. And a sharp decrease in the landfill.”

With tight controls to clean up the gases from the burning, Oslo believes converting waste into energy will help it to halve its carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions within 20 years – making a city, whose wealth was built on oil, one of the greenest on the planet.

Why China isn’t taking American trash anymore.


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Quick, what’s the biggest U.S. export to China?

Soybeans?

Officially, yes, it’s the biggest single product. But combined, the U.S. exports more scrap and waste to China than any other single product — $11.31 billion in 2011. Growth of waste exports has been quick and steep. In 1997, only $182 million worth of waste went to China. But expect that growth to come to a screeching halt.

That’s because China no longer wants all that U.S. waste, as Gwynn Guilford reports at Quartz:

[H]ints are emerging that American cities and the companies that sell trash are in for a rude awakening. A recent sign of this comes from Oregon, where truckloads of plastic are piling up at recycling depots because Chinese buyers cancelled their orders, as Oregon Public Broadcasting reports.

And it’s not just plastic from Oregon. American waste recycling companies are starting to panic. “What I’m hearing from folks in the industry, it’s that just that nothing is going,” the industry insider says. “[China’s] not taking anything anymore. It’s a greenwall.”

More specifically, China’s implemented a policy called Operation Green Fence. The policy cracks down on the amount of contaminants that can be included in a bale of waste, including unwashed plastics and other banned materials, leading to “severe recycling market confusion worldwide.”

It’s hitting the recycling industry especially hard. Global shipments of recovered paper to China are down 18.4 percent. And prices for recovered materials are dropping.

It’s easy to forget that recycling is an industry. As one industry insider told Quartz, “The public doesn’t realize this, but recycling is made possible by technology and markets—they think it’s just a matter of technology. And we don’t have strong enough markets in the US.”

So happens next? One industry source says the initiative will end in November. But for now, other countries could take what the U.S. currently ships to China. Vietnam is a potential source. In the short term it could mean a lot of plastics just end up in the landfill. But in the long term it could lead to more innovation in the industry.

For now, it’s just a mess.

Source: Smart planet