plastic pollution

The Three R's of Recycling and How They Can Help Save the Planet 

Proper waste management is impossible to achieve when only the government is doing it. 

To be successful, every one of us should play our part—no matter how small you think that role may be. 

The best advice is to focus on the three R's of recycling; a concept designed to help cut down how much waste is thrown away. 

Curious to know how you can apply this practice to your everyday life? Read on. 

The Three R's of Recycling 

The R's of recycling consists of the three steps, arranged in the form of an inverted prism: 

  • Reduce (minimize waste and generate as little trash as possible) 

  • Reuse (use a product over and over again through creative means) 

  • Recycle (process waste and create new products from the unusable items) 

The inverted prism means that the first step should be the most effective, so there’s little left for the second step. 

The last step, recycling, should be the last resort; there should be a minimum requirement for this step. 

reduce reuse recycle

1. Reducing the Waste: The Top Priority 

This step aims to reduce how much waste you create so that there’s little to no waste to clean. 

Of the three, it is right at the top of the priority list if you want to live a sustainable lifestyle. 

Here’s what you can do to reduce waste as much as possible: 

  • Reduce plastic and paper use 

Incorrect use and disposal of plastic are among the biggest causes of environmental damage. 

Not only do they take years to decompose, but they also release toxic substances when they do. 

While many of us already know how bad plastic is to the environment, limiting the use of paper is equally important. 

Paper is made from trees and uses a lot of water during manufacturing, so you should also use as little paper as possible. 

Fortunately, technology has made it possible to go paperless in many of our tasks. 

For example:

Instead of using notebooks for rough work or note-taking, an iPad is a better option. 

  • Use reusable water bottles 

Plastic bottles generate tons of solid waste every month. Since much of that waste cannot be processed, it goes to landfills. 

Landfills are allocated patches of unproductive land that are sealed once filled with waste. 

Although useful, they have many disadvantages, including fire hazards, overspill, and land destruction. 

Therefore, creating as little waste as possible for landfills is important. 

Using steel containers instead of plastic bottles, for example, keeps your water hot or cold as needed and reduces plastic waste

  • Reuse grocery store bags and containers 

You can bring a reusable bag when grocery shopping and ditch the single-use plastic ones. 

Besides, stores usually charge extra for grocery bags, so you can save money and the environment when you start bringing your own. 

For fruits and vegetables, you can keep a basket or bamboo bag that looks stylish, which is also much easier to carry than a plastic bag. 

READ MORE: 7 Facts About Plastic Pollution

2. Reusing and Repurposing: The Second Best Option 

Before plastic, people used to make do with reusable items, and would save every container and box to reuse in some other way. 

This also included clothing, as well. 

For example:

A t-shirt would not go into the waste basket when it has gone out of fashion or become too worn out. 

Instead, it would be reused or repurposed as a cleaning cloth or mop. 

We should all start doing that again now that the environment is crying for our help. 

  • Reuse or gift your clothes 

If you don’t need or want a piece of clothing anymore, don’t just throw it away. Gift it to a poor fellow who is not as fortunate as you are. 

You can also be a little crafty and turn your old clothes into pillow covers, cushions, and small comforters. 

  • Repurpose plastic containers as flower pots 

You can use small plastic containers to keep flowers and even decorate them using paint and a brush. 

Another crafty project you can take on is arranging cola bottles into a small bench in your backyard. 

Making a basket by cutting plastic bottles into long strips and knitting them is also a neat idea. 

  • Reuse small household items 

If your shoelaces have seen better days, don’t throw your shoes out. Get active and find a replacement from the market. 

Similarly, your old toothbrush can be a perfect tool to clean your car engine or motorbike. 

You can use plastic bottles as bird feeders and repurpose containers as dog toys. 

recycle paper

3. Recycling or Upcycling

Recycling is the most used by many societies. 

Garbage collection teams gather the material and select the one that can be recycled. 

However:

Even recycling is not possible or sometimes ignored in many parts of the world, and most waste goes to landfills.

What’s worse, countries where environmental legislation is weak burn non-recyclable materials. 

Here’s what you can do to help in recycling efforts: 

  • Separate the waste material 

Not all waste is treated equally at the recycling stage. 

For example, aluminum materials are often recycled to be used in the construction industry. 

Some types of plastic are recycled to make low-grade plastic bottles and containers or shopping bags. 

It’s important to create separate boxes for collecting waste. 

Usually, three- or four color-coded trash bins will be enough, and you can use each one for a particular type of waste. 

  • Sell your old electronics 

Throwing away a broken laptop or any other gadget together with your other trash might not be the best idea. 

Instead, you can sell it to a scrap dealer and make money while helping the environment. 

A lot of electronics are still somewhat valuable even when they’ve stopped working. They have reusable parts, so scrap dealers take them at a fair price. 

The Three R's of Recycling and How They Can Help Save the Planet.jpg

What Should You Do Next? 

Now that you’ve learned about the three R's of recycling, you can start to make lifestyle changes to help your community & the environment as a whole. 

Spread Awareness 

Again, when it comes to saving the planet, everyone should play their part. Otherwise, we’ll be left with a damaged environment that cannot be repaired. 

So, pass this knowledge on to your friends, family, and peers. 

If you’re a student, talk to your teachers about arranging a lecture in your classroom. 

You can also ask your parents to help you reduce, reuse, and recycle and learn for ways to repurpose waste. 

Keep Learning

Next, you should learn about different household materials and how they can be repurposed. 

Educating yourself in what small, simple ways to reduce the amount of waste is a great way to start. Then, take that knowledge and put it to good use.

Adopt a Lifestyle Based on the Three R’s 

The most important thing we should all do is adopt a lifestyle based on the waste management concepts of the three R’s. 

Make a chart of every household item that can be reduced and try to minimize their use in your house. 

Essential items that cannot be reused should go under a separate list. You can then generate ideas to put them to good use. 

Making a conscience effort in separating trach and recyclables doesn’t take much time at all.

READ MORE: SUSTAINABLE GROCERY SHOPPING: 6 TIPS TO SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT

Final Thoughts 

Waste management is a initiative where every citizen must cooperate and collaborate to be successful. 

The three R’s concept provides a simple framework where everyone can take part in at every step. 

Our responsibility is to learn, share, and implement this concept in the real world to save the environment which all our survival depends. 

Thus:

You can find creative ways to make this process successful and help save the planet!

7 Facts About Plastic Pollution

Plastic is everywhere!

Our planet has an estimate of over 5.25 billion tons of ocean plastic.

There are over 300 million tons of plastic produced worldwide each year.

We are heavily reliant on plastic products.

Here are some facts about plastic pollution that show just how big of a problem we, as a society, are dealing with.

Read More: How To Stop Plastic Pollution In The Ocean

1. HOW MANY PLASTIC BAGS ARE MADE EVERY YEAR?

There are now more than five trillion single-use plastic bags being produced worldwide each year; that's around one million tons of plastic waste.

That’s a lot of trips to the grocery store.

2. HOW MUCH PLASTIC IS CREATED ANNUALLY?

In 1950, only 2 million tons of plastic per year was produced in the world.

By 2015, that ballooned to over 381 million tons, AND continues to increase every single year.

Unless current trends change, by 2050, the world will create more plastic than fish globally.

3. WHERE DOES PLASTIC POLLUTION COME FROM?

Plastic pollution comes from many sources including: product manufacturing, shipping and transportation, consumer use and disposal.

80% of the plastic in the world's ocean enter from our rivers and coastlines.

To face plastic pollution head-on, we need to stop it before it gets to the ocean, at the source!

4. HOW MUCH PLASTIC IS NOT RECYCLED?

As much talk as there is about recycling, especially plastic, how much plastic is really recycled?

Only 8.7% of plastic was recycled in 2018. Over 91% of all plastic that was produced was not recycled! Most of the recycled 8.7% came from plastic water bottles.

Most plastics make their way to landfills where they take hundreds of years to degrade.

5. HOW MUCH PLASTIC IS IN THE OCEAN?

8 million metric tons of plastics enter the oceans every year.

Add that to the estimated 150 million metric tons that currently reside there right now. Staggering numbers, indeed.

Plastics are piling up in landfills and oceans faster than we recycle them.

And the problem is compounding annually.

6. HOW MUCH MICROPLASTIC DOES THE AVERAGE PERSON EAT?

There are many types of plastics that are harmful to humans.

A big one is microplastics.

Microplastics are extremely small pieces of plastic that are 5mm in size or less. They can be found virtually everywhere.

We eat and breath these plastic particles every week!

A study estimates that humans eat over 35000 particles of plastic annually, and those estimates increase to over 70000 particles when we add in our innate ability to breath.

Additionally:

This study suggests that when a person gets their water mainly from bottles, that could increase to over 90000 particles a year.

7. HOW MUCH IS 10 LBS OF PLASTIC?

Sometimes different units of measurement can be hard to really visualize.

Visualizing the weight of something can be especially hard because a pound of steel looks a lot different than a pound of feathers.

The same is true of plastic.

It’s such a lightweight material, that it’s hard to visualize what one pound of plastic would actually look like.

It takes about 47 empty half-liter water bottles to make a pound of plastic, and 8 empty gallon milk jugs to make a pound of plastic.

This means that ten pounds of plastic can be made up of 470 water bottles or 80 milk jugs!

HOW YOU CAN HELP

Although these facts can be a bit overwhelming, all of us can help in reducing our own plastic waste.

Every little bit helps.

At Repurpose Recycle, we are committed to reducing & eliminating ocean-bound plastic.

Donate or shop now to support our mission.

How To Stop Plastic Pollution In The Ocean

Currently between 9 and 27 billion pounds of plastic enter the ocean every year.

That means every 5 minutes a whole warehouse worth of plastic will have entered the ocean. This plastic ends up in the fish we eat in micro quantities which contain toxic chemicals that get stored in our bodies over time.

These chemicals found in plastic are linked to birth defects, cancer, abnormal male sexual development, male infertility, and a whole host of other issues.

READ MORE: Types Of Everyday Plastics That Are Harmful To Humans

However:

This is not the end of the havoc plastic pollution causes.

Small micro-plastics that come from our clothing make their way into the ocean and into plankton.

Plankton is a keystone species for life on our planet.

Areas of the ocean where plankton die-off are called dead spots because all ocean life is unable to survive. Plankton produces 70% of the world's oxygen.

Without them, all life on the planet would die. 

Like other environmental issues, the longer we wait to address the plastic pollution crisis, the worse it will get.

So how do we stop it? 

Current Plastic Pollution Solutions 

Many nonprofits are focused on cleaning up the plastic that is currently in the ocean.

There is already 538 million pounds of floating plastic pollution on the surface of our oceans.

However:

Even with millions of dollars in funding, they collectively have pulled .01% of the plastic percent every year that goes into the ocean every year. 

Try putting 95 percent of the efforts on stopping plastic from entering the ocean and only 5 percent on cleanup.
— — Richard Thompson, head of the International Marine Litter Research Unit at the University of Plymouth in the United Kingdom.

Read More: Facts About Plastic Pollution


how to save our oceans from plastic

Although, cleaning up plastic in the ocean is important and meaningful.

There is a more effective way of ending the plastic pandemic—clean up the plastic BEFORE it gets to the ocean.

There is plastic, right now, sitting on the banks of rivers in Guatemala, the Philippines, and countries all over the world that could be collected and processed at a fraction of the cost in time and manpower.

Very few companies have taken this approach as it is more difficult to get funding.

But:

It is the best approach we have today in order to save our oceans for future generations. 

How You Can Stop Ocean-Bound Plastic

You can support us in our mission to stop plastic from entering the ocean by buying some of our merchandise, donating directly, or purchasing products

Each bracelet below is handcrafted by artisans in Guatemala. With every product purchased we remove 10lbs of ocean-bound plastic from the environment and recycle it.

Show Your Support Now!

Our Guatemalan bracelets are hand-crafted by local residents in Guatemala. Each purchase removes 10 pounds of plastic from the oceans. Click below to see our different styles available now!

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