Americans discard millions of tons of aluminum every year, including aluminum cans and other post-consumer scrap. This is despite the fact that aluminum is infinitely recyclable. Unfortunately, the United States is falling far behind several countries in terms of can-recycling rates. To shed light on this issue, Business Insider visited a career can recycler in New York City and companies in Michigan that are revolutionizing post-consumer aluminum recycling.
The video explores the history of aluminum recycling, the impact of China’s National Sword policy on recycling, post-consumer recycling processes, sorting aluminum shreds, and innovative facilities like Hydro’s new facility. Viewers are given insight into how delacquering and the melting and casting of aluminum work. The environmental impact of aluminum recycling is also discussed, emphasizing the importance of sustainable practices.
One highlight of the video is meeting Josefa, a dedicated can recycler, and learning about how bottle bills work to incentivize recycling. The video also addresses the low can recycling rates in the US and explores how the country can catch up to other nations in terms of aluminum recycling. Overall, the video showcases the importance of recycling aluminum cans and the significant economic and environmental benefits that come with it.
Watch the video by Business Insider
Video “Why The US Loses $800M A Year In Unrecycled Aluminum Cans | Big Business | Business Insider” was uploaded on 10/18/2024 to Youtube Channel Business Insider
first
I live in New Hampshire where they have no recycle program as far as incentives go. It makes me sick to throw away a whole barrel of metal cans and plastic bottles that shouldn't even be made if we're not going to responsibly handle the material Left behind after consuming a one-time use product. Plastics being a byproduct of the fuel industry have many useful applications but I feel that we have relied on plastic too often and too much as a substitute for wood, metal and glass. Plastics being used for military applications makes complete and total sense to me you're not really trying to be environmentally efficient when you're blowing people to bits now are you?
3rd
Recycling is a big scam.
We need to stop exporting raw materials like aluminum cans to other countries where they use them to make weapons to aim at our children and grandchildren
Good thing that this industry is being focused on instead selling all that trash to III world countries.
In every normal country you have to pay an extra MINOR sum for the can, just for the deposit value of the can itself.
This way you actually get money back for depositing the cans into store-owned depositing stations, that read the barcode on the cans to verify their recycle value.
This gives the cans themselves value, and makes sure that they do in fact get recycled. We also do the same with many plastic bottles.
Recycling should be incentivized economically, through value of material. But in the US of A that would probably be seen as communism lol.
Recycling materials previously seen as useless junk is the wave of the future. The future will belong to those who can turn trash into treasure just like the only organisms that can survive into the future are the ones who feed on the waste of what's Left behind.
80% of all things that get recycled end up in a Trash Dump
Don't tell me nobody ever had a crush on me
Here in Germany, you don't see any can or bottle lying on the ground. Maybe at festivals and concerts, but there are many collectors, since there is a 0,25€ deposit (Pfand) on each.
Many homeless people collect these and get around 10-50€ each day. So it is also a type of money redistribution.
Amazing video, you work for 40yrs to have $1M in your retirement, meanwhile some people are putting just $10K into trading from just few months ago and now they are multimillionaires