With Dominique, Tai, Morgan, Lenin, and Danyal  Humans need to recycle and refill. Recycling- Remanufacturing of waste materials helps to make new products.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13: Natural Resources
Advertisements

J enny H alpin Recycling Information Specialist (209) , ext. 315
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
Solid Waste and Recycling
Trash and Recycling. How Much Do We Waste? What we generally think of as trash is Municipal Solid Waste (MSW). This waste is also sometimes called post-
Changing the Way We Think About Recycling and Our Trash.
How Recycling Helps By: Student Name. Aluminum Recycling Facts An aluminum can that is thrown away will still be a can 500 years from now! There is no.
7 Benefits of Recycling What is Recycling?
Margaret Mead “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it’s the only thing that ever has.”
Waste The U.S. produces 11 billion tons of waste per year. Industrial waste –about 400 million metric tons per year in the U.S. Municipal Waste- A combination.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Same stuff, different names….  We throw away stuff  We eat food wrapped up in disposable stuff  We do not regularly use reusable containers  We buy.
Benefits of Recycling: Jeopardy
Plastic Bottle Hazard Kait Brogan. Plastic bottle statics 5.1 billion: Amount, in pounds, of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles and jars available.
WHAT IS RECYCLING? Recycling is a process using materials (waste) into new products to prevent waste of potentially useful materials, reduce the consumption.
Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. Preventing and Reducing Pollution  Human activity is responsible for much of the world’s pollution  Humans can also do much.
RECYCLING IN SCHOOLS BY BRITTANY JACKSON
Fair Use Statement Certain images included in this power point presentation fall under that Fair Use Exemption of the U.S. Copyright law. They have been.
Environmental Resources Unit A Understanding Recycling and its Relationship to the Environment.
Recycling By: Ben Hearn Josh Hamilton Harley Chesser.
Consumer Decisions: The Environment Mr. Ervin East Hardin Middle School.
Environmental Health.
Life Cycle Analysis. What is a Life Cycle Analysis? A method in which the energy and raw material consumption, different types of emissions and other.
Biodegradable Plastics
Understanding Recycling and its Relationship to the environment.
Environmental Health BEFORE THE BELL: Get out your journal and writing utensil…
Waste Chapter 19.
Waste.
REDUCE, REUSE, RECYLE YOU are inheriting this Earth! It is up to you to help make it a safe place for you to grow up in!
Computer Systems & Architecture 7f - Environmental Implications.
Recycling Energy and waste management. Types of recycling  Closed loop recycling: plastic bottles becoming new plastic bottles; when the material collected.
Chapter 24 Solid and Hazardous Wastes. Types of Solid Waste  Municipal solid waste  Relatively small portion of solid waste produced  Non-municipal.
Recycle and Waste Video kyZbw8waVwk kyZbw8waVwk.
Recycling, Reusing and Waste Reduction Protecting Our Resources for Future Generations.
Cycling Back to Nature Presented by: Jeannie Mueller.
Waste and Recycling Approaches Through Technology Bill Kuhl.
7 Benefits of Recycling What is Recycling?
My Carbon Footprint Recycling By Jake Guglielmino.
Pollution The Simpsons team.
Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle Mandy Lynch What is Waste? Waste is anything released into the environment that could have a negative impact on that environment.
Paper Recycling Helps the WORLD. What is Recycling? Recycling happens when old, discarded materials are used again to make other new products. For example,
Garbage. We throw away… Enough aluminum to rebuild the country’s commercial airline fleet every 3 months Enough tires each year to encircle the planet.
WASTE MANAGEMENT AND RECYCLING 1. SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT 2.
Think About the future of your Child. Dispose old electronics Dispose old electronics prevents valuable materials from going into the waste stream. Donating.
Recycling. What is recycling? Recycling means taking materials from products you have finished using and making brand new products with them.
Recycling: What can be recycled, and what are the benefits of recycling those products? Student Name Class period.
Municipal Solid Waste Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the U.S. for 2006 U.S. EPA Office of Solid Waste November 2007.
Solid and Hazardous Waste. Solid waste : any unwanted or discarded material we produce that is not a liquid or gas. Municipal solid waste (MSW): produced.
R ECYCLING By: Brooke Clayton D ID Y OU K NOW … In the United States, there are 4 MILLION plastic bottles being used every hour! For every ton of recycled.
The Givin g Tree Tips to Save the World and Save Money Eat fish that is caught in an environmentally responsible manner. This helps to keep the marine.
Chapter 4 Land and Soil Resources
Waste Prevention Includes:
Why Recycling is Important Monroe Area High Future Business Leaders of America.
Lance Currey Thursday, October 14, Recycling 1 ton of plastic saves 7.4 cubic yards of landfill space. Recycling 1 ton of plastic saves 7.4 cubic.
Recycling By Fatima 9NS By Fatima 9NS. By Fatima 9NS By Fatima 9NS.
Chapter 23 Solid and Hazardous Wastes
Recycling is the process of making new products from used materials. This not only has many benefits for the environment, but also for the future of the.
Recycling. What is Recycling Recycling involves processing used materials into new products to prevent waste of potentially useful materials, reduce the.
Natural Resources Chapter 10 Science. I. Natural resources support human activity. Natural resource is anything found in nature that people use. Resources.
The Benefits of Recycling By SPC. Prater, Nyan (U.S. Army)
Unit 6 Lesson 1 What Are Some Natural Resources? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
Air, Water, and Land 4 th Grade.  Pollution- anything that spreads harmful or unpleasant substances into the air, water, or ground. 
4 R’s in Recycling City of Santa Fe Springs. REDUCE What is it? –Waste reduction (or prevention) is the preferred approach to waste management. If it.
Recycling may seem like a relatively new concept, but researching who invented recycling shows that for centuries in the past, recycling was a way of.
Sustainability and the Environment EEn Evaluate the concept of “reduce, reuse, recycle” in terms of impact on natural resources Click for Video.
Resources Classify resources as renewable or nonrenewable and explain the implications of their depletion and the importance of conservation.
Trash Talk.
Waste management trash, recyclables, hazardous waste, nuclear waste, e-waste, biological waste, . . .
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Quiz
Pollution Prevention and Proper Waste Disposal
Presentation transcript:

With Dominique, Tai, Morgan, Lenin, and Danyal

 Humans need to recycle and refill. Recycling- Remanufacturing of waste materials helps to make new products. Some examples of popular items that are recyclable: Auto batteries (99%); steel cans (62.9%); Yard trimmings(62%); paper (51.6%); Aluminum beverage cans (45.1%); Tires (34.9%); plastic beverage bottles(30.9%); Glass containers (25.3%)

 Renewable and non-renewable.  Renewable resources can be replaced or reproduced by the natural process. Ex: Solar Energy, Fresh Water, Biomass.  Non-Renewable resources are found in a fixed or limited amount and cannot be remade or regrown. Ex: Gasoline, Coal, Oil, Natural gas, Diesel, Nuclear Power.

 Humans should Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Everyday people create a lot of waste we need to Reduce, Reuse, Recycle. Things we can do: discover your carbon foot print, plant a tree, walk more and drive less, save water and energy. Hazardous waste can be harmful to human health or to the environment. The United States produced about 38 million tons of hazardous waste in 2005.

 We can plant the trees, grow more crops, use smarter light bulbs. Did you know one ton of paper is equal to 17 trees, 7,000 gallons of water, and 390 gallons of oil? We should buy fuel efficient cars. Buy recycled products as well.

 It’s a method of collecting recyclable materials from households at the curb. For example the blue containers that are used to put newspapers in. We can also help by donating our old clothes etc to charities instead of wasting them. In 2001 recycling along with composting prevented 68 million tons of material from going into and fills and incinerators.

 Did you know aluminum cans are the most recycled consumer products in the United States. Recycling aluminum cans saves precious natural resources. Aluminum cans can be recycled and back in the stores shelves in 60 days!

 Almost one-third of all solid waste made up of paper and paper board products. If all newspaper in the U.S. were not printed over 4,000 trees would be saved.

 Over 23% of 50 billion used plastic bottles were recycled in Around 31% of all used plastic bottles are recycled. Recycling Plastic has many advantages. Around a ton of recycling industry recycled plastic save 5,774 kilowatt- hours of energy and 16.3 ballets of oil.

 Recycling batteries is good. It’s good for the environment. It helps in condensation.  Recycling building implements are good to recycle because we can use wood and bricks for other buildings. We need to recycle asphalt, bricks, glass, plastics etc.

 Asbestos is a natural material made a microscopic bundles of fiber. Friable and non- Friable materials are materials containing asbestos. We need to recycle them because they are dangerous. Materials that have asbestos are considered the most dangerous increased or crumbled form.  Clinical Waste is solid waste generated by hospitals clinics, blood banks, a veterinary hospitals. It’s estimated that hospitals generate more than 6,600 tons of waste per day or more than 2 millions tons of waste each year.

 Computers are electronic devices used for processing and storing information. Recycling computers are good because they contain 30 toxic elements and compounds such as led, beryllium, phosphorous, and mercury etc we need to recycle that because we don’t want that waste to be wasted, we want it recycled.  Recycle cell phones because they have radio waves. Cell phones contain 40%, metal 40%, plastic 20% ceramic AND WE NEED TO SAVE THOSE!

 Every year 20 to 50 million tons of e-waste are generated worldwide. E-waste contains various hazardous chemicals such as lead, cadmium, and mercury so we need to recycle that to make the world better.

 In the U.S. everyday an average person uses about 4 pounds of wood each day. Wood accounts for about 5% of the average household’s waste. Around 32% of the total wood in the solid waste stream is recycled. We need to increase that!

 In the United States about 13.2 million tons of glass waste is generated each year. Around 22% of all glass containers are recycled. Did you know Switzerland recycles 91% of all manufactured glass. It is currently the world’s leading glass recycling nation. We need to beat Switzerland.

 Recycling metal saves a lot more energy than producing metals from ore. Lead is the most recycled made into reusable metal. THOUGH Aluminum saves the most energy!

 Recycling paint and oil helps in the of valuable energy resources. Ten gallons of recycled latex paint saves 1,060 kilowatt-hours of energy. Two gallons of used motor oil can generate enough electricity to run an average household for 24 hours!

 In the United States each year 3.9 billion pounds of used clothing is generated waste. Recycling textiles helps the environment by reducing pollution and saving landfill space. Did you know between 1990 and 2003, the United States exported nearly seven billion pounds of used clothing and worn textile products around the world. An average American throws away about 68 pounds of clothing and textiles per year.

 About 4 million tons of junk mail is generated each year in the United States. Only 22% of it is recycled. In 2005, more than $65 billion was spent on the production and distribution of 45.1 billion pieces of junk mail in the U.S.

 The Average American uses 80 to 100 gallons of water every day, less than half of which is used to drink and cook. About 1.7 billion of waste water is reused or recycled everyday in the United States.

 Curbside Recycling helps reduce the amount of trash generated by almost 35%. In the U.S., it reduced trash by 68 million tons in 2001, saving billions of gallons of gasoline and other natural resources. Curbside recycling saves money and creates jobs. Recycling 10,000 tons of waste creates 36 jobs.

 Recycling cars save more and natural resources and reduces energy consumption. It also reduces the emission of greenhouse gasses released during the manufactured of steel. Cars contain about 65% of steel and iron, by weight. The steel used in cars is made from about 25% recycled steel. Each ton of recycled steel saves 2,500 pounds of iron ore, 1,400 pounds of coal, and 120 pounds of limestone.

 Recycling tires and rubber saves the environment and human health. It is also saves nonrenewable resources such as oil and steel. Improperly disposed of tires and rubber increases energy consumption and pollution. Tire dumps create breeding areas for mosquitoes and cause mosquito-born diseases, though affecting human health.

 The primary objective of eco-lables is to conserve and protect our environment. Eco- Lables has increased consumer awareness of environmental issues. It has also helped people identify products that are harmful to the environment.

 Cookware, mirrors, gift wrap, tissue paper, and oil cans are rarely recycled. We can’t recycle those because they contain raw materials. THE END!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 1. List the Three R’s? 2. Write 2 items we can recycle?  3. What is this project about?  4. True or False??? Curbside Recycling saves and creates jobs. T or F?!?  5.___________ is a example of a renewable resource.  A) Gasoline  B) Paper  C) Fresh Water  6.___________ is an example of a nonrenewable resource.  A) Paper  B)Fresh Water  C)Gasoline  7. What is the most recycled consumer product in the U.S.?

 8. T or F Recycling batteries is NOT good for the environment.  9. What items can be recycled?  A) Junk Mail  B) Cars  C) Computers  D) all of the above  10. Why do you feel recycling is important?

 You must finish or you will be tardy for your class so you must finish it. And hand it in!