Recycling Archives - Big Green Purse https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/category/recycling/ The expert help you need to live the greener, healthier life you want. Wed, 05 Apr 2017 23:33:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 These Are The 3 Best Ways to Recycle Ink Cartridges https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/best-ways-to-recycle-ink-cartridges/ https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/best-ways-to-recycle-ink-cartridges/#comments Wed, 05 Apr 2017 23:33:40 +0000 https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/best-ways-to-recycle-ink-cartridges/ Got a few ink cartridges piling up on your desk because you don’t know what to do with them? The good news is that, almost all of the materials used to make ink cartridges are recyclable. Here are the 3 best ways to recycle ink cartridges – the easiest, too, brought to you with support …

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Got a few ink cartridges piling up on your desk because you don’t know what to do with them? The good news is that, almost all of the materials used to make ink cartridges are recyclable. Here are the 3 best ways to recycle ink cartridges – the easiest, too, brought to you with support from CartridgesDirect.com.au.

Why Recycle Ink Cartridges?

Before we get to where to recycle, the question might be, Why bother?

best ways to recycle ink cartridges⇒Throw away less plastic – Cartridges can take anywhere between 400 and 1000 years to decompose in a landfill, reports CartridgesDirect.

During that process, microplastic is getting into the soil and our ground water, as well as into lakes, rivers, and the ocean.

In Australia alone, more than 25 million ink cartridges end up in landfills every year.

In the U.S., reports InkPal.com, we throw away 750 cartridges every minute. That figure equates to 400 million cartridges per year.

Recent estimates show that 70% of used printer cartridges are discarded around the globe. Stacked end-to-end, one year’s worth of the world’s discarded cartridges alone could circle the planet more than three times.

⇒Save energy – The cartridge itself is made of plastic. Remanufacturing plastic cartridges uses 80% less energy than making new plastic. Plus, it takes about a gallon of oil to make the plastics and chemicals necessary for the production of a new laser cartridge.

⇒Be a good person – Any time we can reuse resources, save energy, and make less trash, we should do it. It’s a way we can do the right thing and be responsible “eco citizens” and leave our world a better place for future generations.

3 Best Ways to Recycle Ink Cartridges

Now for the good part: the 3 best ways to recycle ink cartridges.

Fortunately, recycling ink cartridges is actually really easy. Here are the easiest and best ways I’ve found for recycling my own ink cartridges.

best ways to recycle ink cartridges♥ DROP THEM OFF AT A LOCAL STORE  OR RECYCLING CENTER– Most office supply stores and “big box” stores (Wal-Mart, Best Buy, Staples, etc.) will take your cartridges back at no charge to you. Simply put them in a paper bag (so you don’t get ink on your hands) and drop them off the next time you’re at the store. Or, enter your zip code at this Earth911.com site and they’ll help you find a nearby recycling center that will accept your cartridges.

♥ POP THEM IN THE MAIL – If you buy cartridges online, choose a company that includes a shipping label in the package so you can easily mail back your old cartridges when you get a new one. If you have HP cartridges, you can get a postage-paid shipping label right here. Check with other cartridge suppliers as well.

best ways to recycle ink cartridges

♥ DONATE THEM – Because used ink cartridges are so valuable, many charities collect them and then sell them to recyclers as a fundraiser. Recycle4Charity pays cash for empty cartridges. So does FundingFactory . Cartridges4charity.co.uk redeems used ink cartridges for the Against Malaria Foundation. Cartridges for Kids pays schools and non-profit organizations for ink cartridges, as well as cell phones, iPods, and tablets.

A Few Green Buying Tips

While you want to recycle your cartridges rather than trash them, be green when you buy them, too:

♦ Use fewer cartridges overall by printing less in the first place. Rather than print tickets out, for example, send them to your mobile device. Read rough drafts of documents online. Print in sans serif type, which uses less ink than more elaborate typefaces.

♦ Buy remanufactured ink cartridges. These cartridges will be checked, repaired and refilled with ink that is compatible with your printer. Check online sources, but also know that many Ace Hardware stores sell remanufactured and refilled ink cartridges. (Keep your purchase receipt, in case the remanufactured cartridge doesn’t work perfectly with your printer.)

♦ Use what you buy. Don’t “stock up” on cartridges you’ll never use. If you’re printing a lot less, you’ll need far fewer cartridges, right? If you’ll save money buying cartridges in bulk, find someone to share the purchase with you, rather than stockpile cartridges you don’t need.

NOTE: Sponsors enable us to bring you the expert information you need to live the greener life you want. All editorial opinions are our own. Thanks.

 

 

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Get an (Environmental) Move On! https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/get-an-environmental-move-on/ https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/get-an-environmental-move-on/#comments Tue, 14 Jul 2009 06:34:18 +0000 https://www.newsite.biggreenpurse.com/get-an-environmental-move-on/  Moving from one home to another is not a low-impact activity. If you're relocating from one coast to the other, you could use as much as 120 pounds of cardboard and generate 5,000 pounds of climate-changing carbon dioxide. Even moving from one side of your state to another could have a 500-pound carbon impact, given the fuel burned by moving …

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Moving kit  Moving from one home to another is not a low-impact activity. If you're relocating from one coast to the other, you could use as much as 120 pounds of cardboard and generate 5,000 pounds of climate-changing carbon dioxide. Even moving from one side of your state to another could have a 500-pound carbon impact, given the fuel burned by moving vans and the resources you use to pack up all your stuff. 

How can you make you move more eco and less yecch?

• Don't move what you don't need; to unload unnecessary stuff, donate to Goodwill or the Salvation Army; have a yard sale; freecycle.

• Save newspapers in advance of your move to use as packing paper.

• Pick up discarded boxes from local stores.

• Pack things in suitcases or containers you are also moving to save space and reduce the number of throwaway boxes you use.

• Use the right size truck. A too-larger truck wastes energy. A truck that's too small may need to make too many trips.

• Recycle boxes and packing materials after you unpack.

SUPPLIES
 
These environmentally-friendly packing materials will help make your move greener:

• Recopack – from rentagreenbox.com: 100% recycled plastic boxes come in 3 sizes that can be rented for 14 days. They're delivered and picked up by a truck that runs on waste vegetable oils and bio-fuel and using dollies made from recycled soda cans
o $299 for 100 boxes for 2 week period ($99 per extra week)
o Zip-ties made from 100% recycled plastic eliminate need for packing tape

Eco box • Ecobox – sells used boxes in various shapes and sizes; they also sell moving "kits" with enough boxes and tape to accommodate anything from a 1-bedroom apartment to a 4-bedroom house. 
o No minimum order
o Same day, low cost shipping

Frogbox • FrogBox – British Columbia and Puget Sound, WA

o  A lot like Recopack; just local to the Pacific Northwest

Used cardboard boxes • UsedCardboardBoxes.com
o Sells all sizes of used boxes, though "brand new" packing tape and bubble wrap
o Free shipping for any of its kits, ranging from a studio or dorm room to a 10 bedroom home or comparable office space
 

MOVING COMPANIES

• Green Wheels Van Lines
o For personal, corporate, government/military, or international moves
o Will deliver recycled packing materials to your door
o Uses alternative energy 
o Approved as a SmartWay Partner by the EPA
 
• Green Movers USA
o Aims to be a network of all moving companies that use eco-friendly practices
o Awards movers one-four trees, depending on their efforts to reduce waste, save gas, and use alternative fuels

 
Gogreen moving • Go Green Moving Co.
o Based in southern California, uses bio-fuel in trucks
o Provides rentable crates
o Uses 100% recycled plastic moving pads

NOTE: Green Van Lines claims it makes the world greener "one move at a time," but there's no evidence on its website that the company uses energy-efficient or alterntively fueled vehicles, or supplies its customers with recycled packing materials that minimize waste.

Have you moved recently? Let us know what you did to make it eco.

By Katie Kelleher

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