Friday, January 27, 2006

The myth of recycling


Recycling household waste is one of the most counterproductive things a person can do. It's costly to the taxpayer, increases bureaucracy, wastes time, and ironically, creates pollution.

Don't believe me? Read this:

The truth, though, is that recycling is an expense, not a savings, for a city. "Every community recycling program in America today costs more than the revenue it generates," says Dr. Jay Lehr of the Heartland Institute.

A telling indicator is that cities often try to dump recycling programs when budgets are tight. As Angela Logomasini, director of risk and environmental policy at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, points out in the Wall Street Journal, every New York City mayor has attempted to stop the city's recycling program since it was begun in 1989. Mayor David Dinkins tried, but changed his mind when met with noisy criticism. Rudy Giuliani tried, but was sued by the Natural Resources Defense Council, which won the case. Mayor Bloomberg has proposed temporarily ending the recycling program because, as Logomasini notes, it costs $240 per ton to recycle and only $130 per ton to send the material to a landfill. The numbers for other areas are roughly comparable. The net per-ton cost of recycling exceeds $180 in Rhode Island, while conventional garbage collection and disposal costs $120 to $160 per ton.

The funds go for trucks and collectors and inspectors and bureaucrats. Clemson professor Daniel K. Benjamin points out that Los Angeles has 800 trucks working the neighborhoods, instead of 400, due to recycling. Radley Balko at aBetterEarth.Org, a project of the Institute for Humane Studies at George Mason University, writes, "That means extra wear and tear on city streets, double the exhaust emissions into the atmosphere, double the man hours required for someone to drive and man those trucks, and double the costs of maintenance and upkeep of the trucks." Jerry Taylor of the Cato Institute says costs include "the energy necessary to deliver the recyclables to the collection centers, process the post-consumer material into usable commodities for manufacturers, and deliver the processed post-consumer material to manufacturing plants." Franklin Associates, which provides consulting services for solid waste management, estimates that curbside recycling is 55 percent more expensive, pound for pound, than conventional garbage disposal.


So next time you empty out a jar of Cheez Whiz, guzzle some milk right out of the carton, or scarf down a pizza like the slob that you are, just throw the packaging right into the garbage where it belongs. And don't feel bad about it. After all, you'll be helping the environment.

4 Comments:

At 1:10 PM, Blogger P. M. Jaworski said...

Do look up the Penn & Teller Bullshit! television show on this topic. Since Showtime doesn't show up in Canada, you might want to go to, say, Limewire or something and download it. Or buy it somehow.

 
At 2:23 PM, Blogger Road Hammer said...

I borrowed Bullshit from a friend a few months ago and it's great stuff.

 
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