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» Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Rethink
| Sir Lord heavymonkey Esq |
Posted: Jul 16 2009, 12:29 PM
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![]() Cock Socket ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 1280 Joined: 27-June 09 Member No.: 55 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 780013355 Member Inventory: View Army: 4862 |
In an effort to reduce waste and cut carbon dioxide emissions, Germany and Japan are requiring that products such as automobiles, household appliances and office equipment be designed for easy disassembly and recycling. In May 1998, the Japanese legislature enacted a tough appliance recycling law that prohibits discarding household appliances such as washing machines, TVs or air conditioners. Consumers bear the cost of disassembling appliances in the form of a fee to recycling firms, so there is strong pressure to design appliances so that they can be more efficiently disassembled.
Closely related to this concept is that of remanufacturing. Caterpillar has emerged as a leader within the heavy industry sector. At a plant in Corinth, Miss., the company recycles some 17 truckloads of diesel engines a day. These engines are disassembled by hand by workers who do not throw away a single bolt or screw. Once the engine is disassembled, it is reassembled with all worn parts repaired. The resulting engine is as good as new. Caterpillar’s remanufacturing division is racking up $1 billion a year in sales and growing at 15 percent annually, contributing impressively to the company’s bottom line. Another emerging industry is airliner recycling. Boeing and Airbus are currently vying to see which company can dismantle jetliners most efficiently. The goal is to recycle 90 percent of the plane. With more than 3,000 airliners already put out to pastureand many more to come — this retired fleet has become the equivalent of an aluminum mine. With personal computers becoming obsolete every few years as technology advances, European information technology firms are getting into electronics recycling. Because European law requires that manufacturers pay for the collection, disassembly and recycling of toxic materials in electronic equipment, manufacturers have begun to focus on how to disassemble everything from computers to cell phones. Nokia, for example, has designed a cell phone that will virtually disassemble itself. Patagonia, an outdoor gear retailer, has launched a clothing recycling program for its polyester fiber garments. In fact, Patagonia is now recycling not only the polyester garments it sells, but also those sold by its competitors. A garment made from recycled polyester is indistinguishable from one that contains the initial polyester made from petroleum, and Patagonia estimates that it uses less than one-fourth as much energy. With this success behind it, Patagonia is beginning to work on nylon garments and plans to recycle its cotton T-shirts. Blast From the Past: Clean and Reuse Materials to Lessen Landfill Strain Other recent measures encourage the reuse of products such as beverage containers. Finland, for example, has banned the use of one-way soft drink containers. Canada’s Prince Edward Island has adopted a similar ban on all nonrefillable beverage containers. In both cases, the result has been a sharply reduced flow of garbage to landfills. A refillable glass bottle requires only about 10 percent as much energy per use as a recycled aluminum can. Cleaning, sterilizing and re-labeling a used bottle requires little energy compared with recycling cans made from aluminum, which has a melting point of 660 degrees Celsius (1,220 degrees Fahrenheit). Banning nonrefillables is a quintuple-win option — cutting material use, greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution, water pollution and garbage flow to landfills. There are also substantial fuel savings with these recycled products, because the refillable containers can be back-hauled to the original bottling plants or breweries for refilling. Eliminate Wasteful, Non-essential Industries Another increasingly attractive option for cutting CO2 emissions is to discourage energy-intensive but nonessential industries. The gold and bottled water industries are prime examples. The annual global production of 2,500 tons of gold requires the processing of 500 million tons of ore. That’s more than one-third the amount of virgin ore used to produce steel each year. One ton of steel requires the processing of 2 tons of ore. In stark contrast, for 1 ton of gold, the figure is 200,000 tons of ore. From a climate point of view, it is difficult to justify bottling water (often tap water to begin with), hauling it long distances and selling it for outlandish prices. Clever marketing, designed to undermine public confidence in the safety and quality of municipal water supplies, has convinced many consumers that bottled water is safer and healthier than what they can get from their faucets. However, in the United States and Europe, there are tougher standards regulating the quality of tap water than that of bottled water. Manufacturing the nearly 28 billion plastic bottles used to package water in the United States alone requires 17 million barrels of oil. Include the energy needed for hauling 1 billion bottles of water every two weeks from bottling plants to supermarkets or convenience stores, plus the energy needed for refrigeration, and the barrels of oil used per year by the U.S. bottled water industry number roughly 50 million. Raising energy efficiency to off-set projected growth in energy demand is essential to cutting net CO2 emissions 80 percent by 2020, thus halting the rise in atmospheric CO2 and helping keep future temperature rise to a minimum. Reducing materials use through the measures outlined here will help us attain this goal, moving the world closer to temperature stability. http://www.motherearthnews.com/Nature-Comm...EPI.aspx?page=2 |
| Sir Lord heavymonkey Esq |
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![]() Cock Socket ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 1280 Joined: 27-June 09 Member No.: 55 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 780013355 Member Inventory: View Army: 4862 |
doesnt everybody recycle their plastic shop bags?
or do you buy the reusable ones? michigan has a 10cent deposit on carbonated beverages and beer cans/bottles, there are a few others but mostly soda and beer. so they charge you 10cents when you buy it, IMO they could do it with all recyclable containers, even if they are only 5cents or less...somebody would save and/or scavenge them. |
| Sir Lord heavymonkey Esq |
Posted: Sep 26 2009, 06:23 PM
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![]() Cock Socket ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 1280 Joined: 27-June 09 Member No.: 55 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 780013355 Member Inventory: View Army: 4862 |
hmmm i guess this is a wasted of bandwith... i shall recycle thy purpose my thread..i shall harness the awesome power of boobage.
(IMG:http://s.bebo.com/app-image/6359289953/5411656627/PROFILE/i.idlestudios.com/img/q/u/08/04/03/boobs.jpg) RECYCLE !! |
| fuzzynavel |
Posted: Sep 26 2009, 06:52 PM
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![]() tarty goodness ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 607 Joined: 1-August 09 Member No.: 60 Reputation: 6 pts Groovies: 186 Member Inventory: View |
BOTH -- I reuse and have bought reusable. |
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| Malkavian |
Posted: Sep 26 2009, 11:14 PM
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one lucky pierre!! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 1276 Joined: 22-April 08 Member No.: 13 Reputation: 976 pts Groovies: 45984 Member Inventory: View Army: 1517 |
Awesome boobage. |
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| Sir Lord heavymonkey Esq |
Posted: Sep 29 2009, 05:20 AM
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![]() Cock Socket ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 1280 Joined: 27-June 09 Member No.: 55 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 780013355 Member Inventory: View Army: 4862 |
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| Malkavian |
Posted: Sep 29 2009, 08:20 PM
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one lucky pierre!! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 1276 Joined: 22-April 08 Member No.: 13 Reputation: 976 pts Groovies: 45984 Member Inventory: View Army: 1517 |
What's that to the right side of her? Pillow with condoms stitched to it? Or is it the new Pokemon?
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| Manatee |
Posted: Sep 29 2009, 10:31 PM
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![]() I FUCK CHICKENS! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovy Members Posts: 1845 Joined: 1-September 09 Member No.: 67 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 7035 Member Inventory: View Army: 3130 |
gladly :dancingp: |
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| Sir Lord heavymonkey Esq |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 04:02 PM
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![]() Cock Socket ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 1280 Joined: 27-June 09 Member No.: 55 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 780013355 Member Inventory: View Army: 4862 |
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| Malkavian |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 09:41 PM
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one lucky pierre!! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 1276 Joined: 22-April 08 Member No.: 13 Reputation: 976 pts Groovies: 45984 Member Inventory: View Army: 1517 |
Shouldn't it be INCREASE instead?
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| Manatee |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 11:08 PM
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![]() I FUCK CHICKENS! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovy Members Posts: 1845 Joined: 1-September 09 Member No.: 67 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 7035 Member Inventory: View Army: 3130 |
that is fucking disgusting :neighbor: |
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| Malkavian |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 11:12 PM
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one lucky pierre!! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Admin Posts: 1276 Joined: 22-April 08 Member No.: 13 Reputation: 976 pts Groovies: 45984 Member Inventory: View Army: 1517 |
I thought she had a nice ass.
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| fuzzynavel |
Posted: Nov 3 2009, 11:32 PM
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![]() tarty goodness ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 607 Joined: 1-August 09 Member No.: 60 Reputation: 6 pts Groovies: 186 Member Inventory: View |
she could go see Dr Frankenbooby
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| Sir Lord heavymonkey Esq |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 09:35 AM
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![]() Cock Socket ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovyville Citizens Posts: 1280 Joined: 27-June 09 Member No.: 55 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 780013355 Member Inventory: View Army: 4862 |
just that one or all of them bb? |
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| Manatee |
Posted: Nov 5 2009, 05:05 PM
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![]() I FUCK CHICKENS! ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Groovy Members Posts: 1845 Joined: 1-September 09 Member No.: 67 Reputation: 3 pts Groovies: 7035 Member Inventory: View Army: 3130 |
just that one |
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