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5 votes
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Big Oil’s solution for plastic waste littered with failure
10 votes -
No, you can’t recycle a bowling ball (but people sure keep trying)
9 votes -
Free Geek Twin Cities: E-Waste and education
5 votes -
Amazon destroys millions of items of brand new, unsold stock each year
29 votes -
End of wind power waste? Vestas unveils blade recycling technology.
4 votes -
Is recycling worth it anymore? The truth is complicated.
13 votes -
Textiles to tiles: Veena Sahajwalla's recycling revolution
3 votes -
The uneasy afterlife of our dazzling trash: Where do CDs go to die?
5 votes -
Recycling was a marketing tool used to sell more plastic
30 votes -
How Big Oil misled the public into believing plastic would be recycled
17 votes -
The millions being made from cardboard theft
7 votes -
While not a solution, knowing how to recycle and compost can help the environment
5 votes -
The more Patagonia rejects consumerism, the more the brand sells
9 votes -
Pompeii ruins show that the Romans invented recycling
4 votes -
Even garbage is under threat from the coronavirus' impact on the economy
9 votes -
Scientists isolate bacterial enzyme that rapidly breaks down plastic polymers into recyclable components
6 votes -
South Korea is composting its way to sustainability with automated bins, rooftop farms, and underground mushroom-growing
5 votes -
Don't buy new, fix the old: The repair business is booming
20 votes -
Planet plastic - How big oil and big soda kept a global environmental calamity a secret for decades
14 votes -
Struggling to keep up, Finland exports plastic waste – a quarter of all plastic waste will be sent to facilities in Sweden or Germany for sorting and repurposing
4 votes -
Wind turbine blades can’t be recycled, so they’re piling up in landfills - Companies are searching for ways to deal with the tens of thousands of blades that have reached the end of their lives
26 votes -
A journalist in Japan looks at how much single-use plastic he accumulates in a week, then attempts to spend a week without using any
17 votes -
Planet Money - Episode 926: So, should we recycle?
3 votes -
A Maine paper mill’s unexpected savior: China
6 votes -
Sonos's “recycle mode” intentionally bricks devices so they can't be reused
@atomicthumbs: Sonos states on their website that "sustainability is non-negotiable," and that they design products to minimize impact, but I work at an e-waste recycler and have demonstrable proof this is false. Sonos's "recycle mode" intentionally bricks good devices so they can't be reused.
33 votes -
Sweden will become the first market where all Coca-Cola products are sold in fully recycled plastic bottles
11 votes -
China is forcing the world to rethink recycling
9 votes -
We asked 3 companies to recycle Canadian plastic and secretly tracked it. Only 1 company recycled the material
18 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 -
A new Swedish bicycle is made from 300 recycled Nespresso pods
6 votes -
Ancient technology: Saxon glass-working experiment
5 votes -
How the plastics industry is fighting to keep polluting the world
12 votes -
This house was built using 600,000 recycled plastic bottles
11 votes -
Experts scoff but Joost Bakker believes he can make oil from dirty plastic
4 votes -
The world's first automatic textile recycling facility will be built in Malmö
6 votes -
How the Swedish town of Eskilstuna became the world capital of recycling
5 votes -
Asian countries take a stand against the rich world’s plastic waste
11 votes -
"Shipbreakers" A documentary about the people and communities involved in the dangerous and dirty industry of scrapping old ships. (2004, National Film Board)
9 votes -
Malaysia returning unwanted Canadian plastic
5 votes -
The new recycling is called 'recommerce’
4 votes -
Carefully, Japan reconsiders the trash can
9 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 -
Timor-Leste aims to become world's first plastics-neutral country
6 votes -
Economics of recycling
11 votes -
On poisoning children
5 votes -
How US recycling is changing now that China won’t take it
11 votes -
India confirms scrap plastic ban will be delayed
7 votes -
Hundreds of US cities are killing or scaling back their recycling programs
23 votes -
What happens now that China won't take U.S. recycling: Many waste-management companies are simply burning recyclables or sending them to landfills
15 votes