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3 votes
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Where to report birds tangled in plastic rubbish
4 votes -
New infrared-based technology promises to give textiles recycling a giant leap forward by replacing manual sorting with an automated method in Finland
3 votes -
IKEA has committed to becoming a circular business by 2030 – by eliminating waste and reusing resources
8 votes -
Scientists from the University of Borås are exploring the possibility of converting old pieces of glutinous waste into yarn
4 votes -
Cigarette butts are toxic plastic pollution. Should they be banned?
11 votes -
Nuclear power offers an abundant supply of low-carbon energy. But what to do with the deadly radioactive waste?
12 votes -
We considered ourselves to be a powerful culture
8 votes -
Solar-powered barge gobbles up trash in Finland's waterways
5 votes -
Crystal Geyser mistakenly emails Chronicle: Randle Bottling project likely ‘dead’
8 votes -
The world's first automatic textile recycling facility will be built in Malmö
6 votes -
Asian countries take a stand against the rich world’s plastic waste
11 votes -
The toxic effects of electronic waste in Accra, Ghana
6 votes -
Malaysia returning unwanted Canadian plastic
5 votes -
How to measure how much pee is in your pool
8 votes -
What should I do with all my old tech junk?
I am currently decluttering, and I have boxes upon boxes of accumulated tech stuff (for lack of a better term). USB cables, dongles, flash drives, cameras, MP3 players, phones, installation discs,...
I am currently decluttering, and I have boxes upon boxes of accumulated tech stuff (for lack of a better term). USB cables, dongles, flash drives, cameras, MP3 players, phones, installation discs, etc.
It's a giant mess that I want to be rid of, I just don't know the best way to go about it and thus have some questions:
- What's my best course of action: Is "electronics recycling" the way to go? Should I sort it and donate the useful stuff to a thrift store? Would local mom-and-pop computer shops potentially be interested in some of it?
(Note: I have no interest in extracting money from the hoard and would be happy for the useful stuff in there to go to a "good home" that can take advantage of it.)
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Is there anything that's simply not worth donating/recycling? Should I simply throw some older stuff (e.g. floppies, component cables, anything with a parallel port) out, or does recycling somehow reconstitute the metals/resources in them?
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I have several dead hard drives and flash drives that have personal information on them that I was never able to wipe. Should I just hold onto these indefinitely since someone could use them maliciously, or is the likelihood of that happening close to nil?
18 votes -
Grocery stores are packed with plastic. Some are changing
7 votes -
Inside the long war to protect plastic: Single-use plastic is clogging oceans and landfills. The industry that makes it has waged a decades-long campaign to keep it on the market.
4 votes -
Meal kits have smaller carbon footprint than grocery shopping, study says
17 votes -
Economics of recycling
11 votes -
Meal kit delivery services like Blue Apron have an overall smaller carbon footprint than grocery shopping because of less food waste and a more streamlined supply chain
10 votes -
The rise of ‘zero-waste’ grocery stores
17 votes -
The zero-waste revolution: How a new wave of shops could end excess packaging
13 votes -
On poisoning children
5 votes -
Are plastic bag bans garbage?
11 votes -
How US recycling is changing now that China won’t take it
11 votes -
Kipple field notes
3 votes -
Five Melbourne councils forced to dump recycling in landfill as Victoria crisis deepens
5 votes -
To highlight the waste material from discarded electronic parts, artist Zayd Menk is building a small-scale model of London's Westminster area solely out of e-waste
11 votes -
Waste crisis looms as thousands of solar panels reach end of life
8 votes -
Taiwan has one of the highest recycling rates in the world. Here’s how that happened.
8 votes -
Scientists think Alabama's sewage problem has caused a tropical parasite. The state has done little about it.
6 votes -
Minimalism and/or zero waste life
Hi there. It seems that minimalist and zero waste movements have picked up some steam recently in many first world countries as a reaction to the consumerist, greed-based lifestyles promoted and...
Hi there. It seems that minimalist and zero waste movements have picked up some steam recently in many first world countries as a reaction to the consumerist, greed-based lifestyles promoted and upon realisation of our impact on the world. As an aspiring zero waste minimalist and general conversationalist, I am interested in your opinions, so I'll bombard you with some questions.
Do any of you lead a minimalist or zero waste life, or are you aspiring to or making the transition right now?
What is your opinion of the movements?
Are you opposed to the lifestyles?
Why are you/do you want to be minimalist or create zero waste?
What is minimalism to you?
Are you a minimalist in some or all parts of your life?
What challenges did you run into when making the changes, and how did you overcome them?
Is there anything you recommend to those who are still just aspiring?
Does minimalism imply frugality?
Do you have anything else to add?
28 votes -
I collected my plastic waste for a year, and learned the truth about recycling
14 votes -
The country where unwanted food is selling out
7 votes -
UK scientists turn coffee industry waste into electricity
7 votes -
Using their loaf: Baker reuses leftovers to make waste bread
14 votes -
2018 compost yield so far
Cross-posted with /r/composting I'm pretty proud of the results of my first year of serious composting (before this year, my method was, "dump kitchen scraps in a pile and turn it occasionally"),...
Cross-posted with /r/composting
I'm pretty proud of the results of my first year of serious composting (before this year, my method was, "dump kitchen scraps in a pile and turn it occasionally"), so I figured I'd share. Here's a picture of the pile, opened up yesterday for turning/dumping fresh kitchen scraps. Closer view, and even closer. As you can see, it still has a ways to go. It consists of mostly kitchen scraps, grass clippings, and oak leaves, and I guess the latter of those takes quite a while to break down. Here's a picture of it covered with a tarp after I was done, yesterday.
This is actually a combination of eight different smaller piles I worked on throughout the year while I was teaching myself to make compost. The first piles I made were basically just the result of mowing some tall grass/wild plants in the spring--I had thought that since I was mowing up both leaves and grass that the ratio would be just right for composting. I was wrong. Those three piles didn't really go anywhere. I should've added far more leaf matter, kept them wetter, and combined them into one rather than three.
The fourth pile was a combination of kitchen scraps and leaf matter. I had about a 1/2:1 ratio of leaf matter to kitchen scraps. It turned out okay, but of course, I should've added more browns. The fifth pile (featuring a guest who liked the "fresh greens" that I often went outside to spray onto the pile, if you catch my drift...) started out with probably a 1:1 ratio of browns to greens and ended up with a 2:1 ratio, since I started actually figuring things out. I used both mowed-up leaves and mowed-up household paper waste for my browns, and kitchen scraps and grass clippings for my greens. The pile did end up getting fairly warm. I turned it every 2-4 days.
The sixth and seventh piles were nothing but oak leaves mixed with grass clippings. I wasn't great about getting the ratios exactly right, but they were both probably close to 1 1/2:1 browns to greens. Both heated up after I turned them, every few days, and turned out great. I think I do have some pictures, but can't find them.
I started using a tarp with my eighth pile, and that tarp, as well as the increased amount of browns--always at least 2:1--made a huge difference, as previously I had a hard time keeping piles at the right moisture level. Either they'd dry out in the sun or they'd get soaked in the rain. The tarp protected from both and helped insulate the pile, enabling it to get to the right temperature despite being fairly small.
I tried to follow the Berkeley method closely (other than that I added to it every time I turned it). If I added new scraps, I let it sit for four days; otherwise, I turned it every other day. I started adding pretty much anything to it. One time while I was turning it, I found a dessicated dead robin nearby and tossed that in. There was no trace of it the next time I turned the pile.
Fairly recently, I combined all of my piles into one, as you saw above. This makes it a lot harder to turn, but it seems to be going well. Instead of making a new pile and letting this one sit, I've continued adding to this one every week, when I turn it (now that it's this big, it's hard to find time to turn it more often than that). I'm not sure if I'll be able to do this through winter. I've been stocking up on coffee grounds from Starbucks (I have maybe 8 bags of them sitting in the garage?) to help me keep it going, but it gets pretty cold here in Michigan. Maybe I should start a new pile in the winter rather than keeping this one going; I haven't decided, yet. I'm happy to hear your suggestions.
Thanks for reading! Tremendous thanks to /r/composting; everyone there is incredibly helpful, and there are many very knowledgeable folks there. I couldn't have learned this much about composting without them. I've offered them my five invitations, so hopefully we can eventually get the same kind of composting/gardening discussion over here!
I'm hardly an expert after just one year of composting, but I'm happy to answer any questions you have about my methods, about composting in general, or about how you might get started.
Now for some bonus pics, just for fun:
A bear admiring my pile
That same bear about to destroy a bird feeder... D'oh.
Compost/Hugelkultur-in-progress (I'm not sure how people find the time to gather enough woody materials/grass clippings to make a hugelkultur all at once!)22 votes -
California bans restaurants from automatically giving out plastic straws
10 votes -
California becomes the first state to restrict plastic straws at restaurants
17 votes -
Hog farmers scramble to drain waste pools ahead of Hurricane Florence
5 votes -
Only you can prevent gross, smelly fatbergs from clogging up city sewers, says inspector
7 votes -
How one Canadian food court eliminated 117 bags of garbage a day
8 votes -
Scientists put a nuclear waste container through a demanding trip to see if the fuel would break
7 votes -
The Berkeley Pit is a gorgeous, toxic former mining site in Montana that’s beloved by tourists. But unless it’s cleaned up soon, it could become the worst environmental disaster in American history
8 votes -
Plastic food pots and trays often unrecycleable
6 votes -
Hidden power: Sydney dump to turn plastic into fuel
6 votes -
Why smart policies are key to solving the world’s clean water problems
6 votes -
China just handed the world a 111-million-ton trash problem
17 votes -
Hell on wheels: Fatal accidents, off-the-books workers, a union once run by a mobster - The rogue world of one of New York’s major trash haulers
3 votes