

Recycle Aluminum and Tin Cans
We annually bury enough aluminum to rebuild the entire American commercial air fleet many times over and enough steel to reconstruct Manhattan. The wood and paper dumped in landfills could heat at least five million homes for two hundred years.
cans are easily recycled. Most communities have numerous places to drop off cans, and an increasing number have curbside pickups of recyclables. Some shopping centers have reverse vending machines that will pay you for aluminum cans. Three good reasons to recycle aluminum cans: An aluminum can thrown away in the trash will still be in the landfill hundreds of years from now. A can that is returned and recycled is typically back on the supermarket shelf within two months. Many states now require a refundable deposit on beverage containers. You’ll get that money back if you recycle the can. Making aluminum from raw materials is expensive because of the electricity to make aluminum from scrap. The water and air pollution that accompany manufacturing are also reduced by 90% to 95%. Incidentally, aluminum in other forms is also recyclable. This includes aluminum foil and frozen food trays, aluminum siding, aluminum pots and pans, and even lawn furniture. All of these can be made into similar products or into castings for new automobile parts. You would probably have to take such item to a recycling center. Tin can recycling All tin cans (which are really steels cans coated with either tin or chromium) are also recyclable. Steel producers use scrap to make a variety of products. It is cheaper than making steel from scratch; it reduces pollution; and recycling keeps the cans out of the landfill. |
| Article Categories |