Electronics Recycling ; Technical assistance
This explains the legislation for recycling electronic materials. It gives options for businesses and residents and lists pertinent web site addresses for more information.
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This explains the legislation for recycling electronic materials. It gives options for businesses and residents and lists pertinent web site addresses for more information.
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In: Hill , A L , Leinikka Dall , O & Andersen , F M 2014 , ' Modelling Recycling Targets : Achieving a 50% Recycling Rate for Household Waste in Denmark ' , Journal of Environmental Protection , vol. 5 , no. 7 , pp. 627-636 . https://doi.org/10.4236/jep.2014.57064
Within the European Union (EU) a paradigm shift is currently occurring in the waste sector, where EU waste directives and national waste strategies are placing emphasis on resource efficiency and recycling targets. The most recent Danish resource strategy calculates a national recycling rate of 22% for household waste, and sets an ambitious goal of a 50% recycling rate by 2020. This study integrates the recycling target into the FRIDA model to project how much waste and from which streams should be diverted from incineration to recycling in order to achieve the target. Furthermore, it discusses how the existing technological, organizational and legislative frameworks may affect recycling activities. The results of the analysis show that with current best practice recycling rates, the 50% recycling rate cannot be reached without recycling of household biowaste. It also shows that all Danish municipalities will need to make efforts to recover all recyclable fractions, and that the increased recycling efforts of only selected municipalities will not be sufficient to reach the target.
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In: Cloverleaf Books (tm) -- Planet Protectors Ser.
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table Of Contents -- Chapter One Too Much Trash -- Chapter Two Recycling Helps Clean Up -- Chapter Three Sorting It All Out -- Chapter Four Surprise! -- Recycle A Rainbow Activity -- Glossary -- To Learn More/Index -- Back Cover.
ISSN: 2195-9498
In: Current Issues in Economics and Finance, Vol. 12, No. 9
World Affairs Online
In: Water ; Volume 3 ; Issue 3 ; Pages 869-881
Australia is the driest inhabited continent on earth and, more importantly, experiences the most variable rainfall of all the continents on our planet. The vast majority of Australians live in large cities on the coast. Because wastewater treatments plants were all located near the coast, it was thought that large scale recycling would be problematic given the cost of infrastructure and pumping required to establish recycled water schemes. This all changed when Australia experienced a decade of record low rainfall and water utilities were given aggressive targets to increase the volume of water recycled. This resulted in recycled water being accepted as a legitimate source of water for non-drinking purposes in a diversified portfolio of water sources to mitigate climate risk. To ensure community support for recycled water, Australia lead the world in developing national guidelines for the various uses of recycled water to ensure the protection of public health and the environment. Australia now provides a great case study of the developments in maximizing water recycling opportunities from policy, regulatory and technological perspectives. This paper explores the evolution in thinking and how approaches to wastewater reuse has changed over the past 40 years from an effluent disposal issue to one of recognizing wastewater as a legitimate and valuable resource. Despite recycled water being a popular choice and being broadly embraced, the concept of indirect potable reuse schemes have lacked community and political support across Australia to date.
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In: Social research: an international quarterly, Band 65, Heft 1, S. 141
ISSN: 0037-783X
In: 21st Century Skills Library: Global Citizens: Environmentalism Ser
In: How our choices impact Earth
Culture survives today by means of a constant recycling, optimistically trying to overcome its own decadence in the 21st century. Recycling Culture(s) addresses from a variety of perspectives this strategy, analyzing not only a wide range of texts but also of cultural practices. As the volume shows, culture thrives on a permanent state of flux, borrowing materials for its own survival wherever they are found and always favouring hybridity. This refers not only to how texts cross genre and med...
In: Contemporary European history, Band 22, Heft 3, S. 347-370
ISSN: 1469-2171
When citizens recycle waste, we consider this an act of responsible 'green' citizenship. Today's consumers query the environmental impact of their consumption. Shoppers wonder whether the goods they buy are properly recyclable; others translate their concerns for the environment into a daily practice of separating, storing, collecting and transporting reusable waste. Most European consumer-citizens have incorporated recycling into their daily routine. Today, modern recycling is usually seen as a product of the 1970s, when grass-root movements and environmental policies generated new consumer practices. The assumption is that recycling only gained widespread public support from industry, politics and consumers a few decades ago.
In: Environmental management volume 5