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Recycling

Community Recycling

Many places across Southeast Texas offer free recycling. Here are places to drop items that can by recycled: 

 – Near Wal-Mart on Dowlen Road in Beaumont, they recycle batteries and light bulbs of all kinds.

 – rechargeable batteries, gift cards, cds, dvds, cd/dvd cases, ink and toner cartridges, wires, cords, cables, remotes, controllers, plastic bags

 – fluorescent bulbs, rechargeable batteries, plastic bags

 – ink cartridges

 – glass, plastic, aluminum, plastic bags, mp3/cell phone/ink cartridges

 – is a residential service that picks up mixed recyclables at customer's doors.

Other recycling places can be found at . 

Benefits of Recycling

All information is from the .

How does recycling benefit the environment?

Recycling reduces the use of natural resources by reusing materials:

  • 94% of the natural resources used by Americans are non-renewable. Non-renewable, natural resource use has increased from 59% in 1900 and 88% in 1945.
  • Recycling saves non-renewable resources. For example, by not recycling paper, 80% more wood will need to be harvested by 2010 to meet growing paper consumption demands. However, through active paper recycling, only 20% more wood will need to be harvested by 2010.
  • It takes 95% less energy to recycle aluminum than it does to make it from raw materials.
  • Making products from recyclables results in energy savings. Recycled steel saves 60% production energy, recycled newspaper 40%, recycled plastics 70% and recycled glass 40%.
  • Using scrap steel instead of virgin ore to make new steel takes 40% less water and creates 97% less mining waste.

How does recycling benefit the economy?

  • Incinerating 10,000 tons of waste creates 1 job, while landfilling the same amount creates 6 jobs. Recycling the same 10,000 tons creates 36 jobs!
  • The National Recycling Coalition reports that recycling has created 1.1 million jobs, $236 billion in gross annual sales and $37 billion in annual payroll.
  • By meeting the state’s 50% recycling goal, California is expected to create about 45,000 recycling jobs, compared to 20,000 new jobs slated to be created for the manufacturing sector.
  • Massachusetts employs more than 9,000 people in more than 200 recycling enterprises. About half of these jobs are in the recycling-based manufacturing sector. These businesses represent more than half a billion dollars in value to the state's economy.
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Why is recycling important to future generations?

Natural resources are being depleted and landfills are being filled at an increasing rate. Our current system of production, consumption and disposal has become unsustainable. It is imperative for everyone—from individuals to large organizations—to rethink our ideas and our relationship to trash disposal. By reducing the amount of trash produced and reusing existing materials, we can all make a difference by protecting the environment, conserving natural resources and sustaining the planet for future generations.

Recycling Statistics

  • NIH's current recycling average as reported to Montgomery County is about 64%, which includes both the mandatory and additional recyclables.
  • The NIH recycling rate for the mandatory recyclables (mixed paper, commingled, cardboard and scrap metal) was 40% for 2013. The current recycling goal for businesses in Montgomery County is 70% by 2020.
  • The Waste Diversion Rate for FY 2014 was 54%. This takes into account source reduction and reuse activities in addition to recycling. This does not include construction debris.
  • At NIH, each person disposes of 2.4 pounds of trash per day and recycles 1.7 pounds of material.
  • A routine waste audit of Building 13 in June 2007 determined that over 42% of materials found in the solid waste compactor were mandatory recyclables, weighing over 2,540 pounds with the majority of it being mixed paper (2,340 pounds). During 2010, waste audits from buildings 10, 35, 37 and 13 found approximately 25-35% of the solid waste was recyclable material.