How to recycle practically anything

I’m a master recycler, but
aseptic packages (like juice boxes and soy milk boxes) and
Tyvek envelopes have been two of my most frustrating challenges. Even in San Francisco, where our recycling program is
exceptional in the amount and variety of stuff it accepts, we can’t get rid of these items by just tossing them in the blue or green bins.
Google to the rescue. Today I found a great article from
E magazine,
“How to recycle practically anything”, which gave me answers to both of these.
The article is great, I recommend you peruse it if you ever wondered how to recycle any of the following:
- aerosol cans
- aluminum foil
- autos, jet skis, boats, RVs, etc.
- books
- car batteries, motor oil, oil filters, antifreeze
- carpet and padding
- clothing
- eyeglasses
- fruit rinds, veggie scraps, coffee grounds, tea bags
- magazines, catalogs, phone books
- crayons, art supplies, wine corks, fabric
- ewspaper, aluminum cans, metal cans
- paper, cardboard boxes
- plastic bags
- 1–7 plastic containers
- packaging “peanuts”
- pots and pans
- Priority Mail (Tyvek) envelopes
- records
- styrofoam
- videotapes, floppy disks, Zip disks, DVDs, CDs, jewel cases
- wire hangers
Two they didn’t cover, which I wish they would: wax paper and waxed containers like milk cartons. If you live in San Francisco, you can now put them in your compost bin. In most other places, I think this one’s still a challenge.
For many, plastic bags are also a little challenging since most curbside programs don’t take them (including San Francisco), but you can recycle clean bags at Safeway stores (in bins usually located near the front, outisde), so it’s just a matter of having the discipline to save them up and deliver them. In our home, we separate them into ones we can reuse and ones that aren’t worth it. We stuff them in a bin until it’s full, then find the largest bag and fill it with all the others, and migrate it to the garage or the trunk of the car, where we’ll remember to take it out the next time we go to Safeway.
E’s article also includes a few things you may not realize are hazardous materials, and
shouldn’t be just thrown in the trash:
- batteries
- fluorescent lights
- consumer electronics (iPods, cell phones, pagers, computers, etc.)
- paint
- smoke detectors
The last one I wish they’d covered was prescription medicine. While you can’t technically recycle it, it’s very hazardous to throw into the garbage, or worse yet, flush down the toilet. That stuff goes right into our water system and get gobbled up by fish, frogs, birds, and others, and it comes right back around to you and me in the form of rainwater and the fish we eat. Do you really want to eat salmon a la viagra?
Labels: environment, packaging, recycling, reuse, San Francisco
The environmental impact of the wine industry
Updated January 2009: Added link Jean-Charles Boisset’s talk at
Compostmodern 08, and link to journal entry on recycling Tetra Paks.

A few weekends back I attended a conference called
Compostmodern, which consisted mostly of panels and presentations about sustainability as it applies to the graphic design industry. A couple of the presentations diverged slightly from the main focus, but they were interesting nevertheless.

One such was given by Jean-Charles Boisset, president of De Loach Vineyards and Boisset Family Estates, which make a wide variety of wine and spirits under various labels, in California and France. The charismatic Boisset’s presentation was interesting on many fronts, but I was struck by some of the things I learned about the wine industry as a whole, and about his companies’ efforts in particular.
Update: Listen to Boisset’s entire talk:
Download the MP3.
ImpactsThe global wine industry has a
tremendous impact on the environment, from production and manufacturing through transportation and marketing, and ultimately with the consumer who must deal with the resulting packaging materials. Plenty of people don’t bother to recycle (or can’t) their wine bottles, and how many of us actually know what to do with corks, other than throw them in the trash?
Wine production itself accounts for a large amount of synthetic fungicides, herbicides, and fertilizers that end up in our earth and water. Not to mention the massive amounts of water used in grape production. “Likewise, untreated waste water from winery use — hosing down barrels, tanks and buildings — can harm the ecosystems in and around rivers, lakes and ponds.” [
source]
A 2006 study showed that
a pound of waste is created for every bottle of wine made, including the release of 16g of sulphur dioxide into the air. According to Boisset, packaging alone accounts for a whopping 49% of the cost of every bottle of wine manufactured (including design and production of said packaging, presumably).
BiodynamicsA growing number of wineries are
embracing sustainable techniques, and some — like De Loach — are making use of “
biodynamics.” I had heard the term before but I didn’t really know much about it until Boisset’s presentation about how his family vineyards in France are managed. Later I browsed the De Loach website and was enthralled by the
unusually detailed description of what the vineyard is doing over several years to convert the estate entirely to biodynamic production.
From the
De Loach website: “Converting 22 acres of vineyards to biodynamic farming methods requires time and patience. Before planting the new vineyard at DeLoach, we are enriching the soil by letting the land lay fallow through two cover crop successions and applying specific biodynamic compost and preparations.”
“We will apply horn manure and barrel compost in the fall in order to introduce more beneficial microorganisms into the soil. Horn manure is the most widely-recognized symbol of biodynamics; [Rudolph] Steiner named it prep 500 in his original lecture. To make it, we bury a cow horn filled with cow manure into the vineyards and let it remain over winter. The horn provides nutrients to microorganisms in the soil that turn the manure into compost. The finished compost is essentially a ‘bug in a jug’, or soil inoculum, that contains microorganisms naturally adapted to the farm’s soil since that is where the compost is made. The barrel compost we will use was started in March 2005, and is a mixture of organic barley straw and clean cow manure, containing no hormones or other chemicals....”
Alternative wine packagingI’ve long been aware of several companies’ efforts to green the wine-making process, ever since 1996 or so when I learned of Fetzer Vineyards’ use of
recycled glass in their bottles and
other sustainability efforts. I visited Fetzer on a trip north one year with my friend
Laura Stec, a chef and environmental educator.
Another vineyard I’ve been impressed by is
Bonny Doon, located in our very own Santa Cruz Mountains. They’ve pushed the industry to adopt the decidedly unsexy screw cap as a superior alternative to corks, for both environmental and freshness reasons.
Boisset, for its part, is packaging some of its wines in the even less sexy
Tetra Pak, an aseptic package that you might be more familiar with from soy milk cartons. Boisset’s French Rabbit label is sold in this alternative packaging.
As
others have noted, the Tetra Pak is problematic. While it is theoretically recyclable, in the U.S. there are practically no communities that accept aseptic packaging among their recyclables (update:
How to recycle practically anything). According to Boisset this packaging is
more recyclable in Europe, but the fact remains that the U.S. recycling economy isn’t up to speed on this packaging yet, and it may be another decade before we see its wide-spread recyclability (let’s not forget that much of the middle of the U.S.
still has no municipal recycling
at all).
Labels: environment, food and drink, green design, packaging, recycling