EcoWorld

Recycling Myths: Smothered in Garbage vs. More Landfill Capacity than Ever

Kids Sort Trash
Lessons start early in life
all recycling is good…

Editor’s note: Recycling is not always the environmentally correct choice. Many items we recycle come from abundant raw materials and are inert and harmless when dumped. It costs more to recycle these than to bury the used and manufacture the new from scratch. Glass is a perfect example; plastic runs a close second. If throwing away glass and plastic causes us to ever run out of sand and oil byproducts we can mine the landfills and recycle them all at once – it would be cheaper and easier than perpetual recycling. There’s plenty of land for landfills, there’s very little hazard remaining in modern landfills, and the economics and the environment often favor using them. Trillions are squandered on needless recycling. So what myths prevent change?

Governments across the European Union and America have announced plans to require more recycling.

The European Union has ordered the citizens of the United Kingdom to roughly double their recycling rates by 2008, while the city governments of New York and Seattle have proposed mandatory expansions of existing recycling programs.

These moves are not based on new developments in resource conservation; instead they – like other mandatory recycling programs – rest on misconceptions of mythic proportions. This article discusses the most egregious of these myths.

MYTH 1: OUR GARBAGE WILL BURY US

Rolling Hillside
All of America’s garbage for the next century could
fit in just one landfill, only about 10 miles square

Since the 1980s, people repeatedly have claimed that the United States faces a landfill crisis. Former Vice President Al gore, for example, asserted we are “running out of ways to dispose of our waste in a manner that keeps it out of either sight or mind.”

This claim originated in the 1980s, when the waste disposal industry moved to using fewer but much larger landfills. The Environmental Protection Agency, the press, and other commentators focused on the falling number of landfills, rather than on their growing overall capacity, and concluded that we were running out of space. The EPA also underestimated the prospects for creating additional capacity.

In fact, the United States today has more landfill capacity than ever before. In 2001, the nation’s landfills could accommodate 18 years’ worth of rubbish, an amount 25% greater than a decade before. To be sure, there are a few places where capacity has shrunk. But the uneven distribution of available landfill space is no more important than is the uneven distribution of auto manufacturing: Trash is an interstate business, with 47 states exporting the stuff and 45 importing it. Indeed, the total land area needed to hold all of America’s garbage for the next century would be only about 10 miles square.

MYTH 2: OUR GARBAGE WILL POISON US

The claim that our trash might poison us is impossible to completely refute, because almost anything might pose a threat. But the EPA itself acknowledges that the risks to humans (and presumably plants and animals) from modern landfills are virtually nonexistent: According to the EPA’s own estimates, modern landfills can be expected to cause 5.7 cancer-related deaths over the next 300 years – just one death every 50 years. To put this in perspective, cancer kills over 560,000 people every year in the United States.

Older landfills do possess a potential for harm to the ecosystem and to humans, especially when built on wetlands or swamps, because pollutants can leach from them. When located on dry land, however, even old-style landfills generally pose minimal danger, in part because remarkably little biodegradation takes place in them.

Modern landfills eliminate essentially any potential for problems. Siting occurs away from groundwater supplies, and the landfills are built on a foundation of several feet of dense clay, covered with thick plastic liners. This layer is covered by several feet of gravel or sand. Any leachate is drained out via collection pipes and sent to municipal wastewater plants for treatment. Methane gas produced by biodegradation is drawn off by wells on site and burned or purified and sold.

MYTH 3: PACKAGING IS THE PROBLEM

RECYCLING RATES – USA 2000
United States Recycling Rates
Cardboard is recycled at three times the rate for glass;
the worth of glass recycling is debatable.

Contrary to current wisdom, packaging can reduce total rubbish produced. The average household in the united States generates one-third less trash each year than does the average household in Mexico, partly because packaging reduces breakage and food waste. Turning a live chicken into a meal creates food waste. When chickens are processed commercially, the waste goes into marketable products (such as pet food), instead of into a landfill. Commercial processing of 1,000 chickens requires about 17 pounds of packaging, but it also recycles at least 2,000 pounds of by-products.

The gains from packaging have been growing over time, because companies have been reducing the weight of the packages they use. During the late 1970s and 1980s, although the number of packages entering landfills rose substantially, the total weight of those discards declined by 40 percent. Over the past 25 years the weights of individual packages have been reduced by amounts ranging from 30 percent (2-liter soft drink bottles) to 70 percent (plastic grocery sacks and trash bags). Even aluminum beverage cans weigh 40 percent less than they used to.

MYTH 4: WE MUST ACHIEVE “TRASH INDEPENDENCE”

Numerous commentators contend that each state should achieve “trash independence” by disposing within its borders all of its rubbish. But, as with all voluntary trade, interstate trade in trash raises our wealth as a nation, perhaps by as much as $4 billion. Most of the increased wealth accrues to the citizens of areas importing trash.

Not only is the potential threat posed by modern landfills negligible, but transporting rubbish across state lines has no effect on the environmental impact of its disposal. Moving a ton of trash by truck is no more hazardous than moving a ton of any other commodity.

MYTH 5: WE SQUANDER IRREPLACEABLE RESOURCES WHEN WE DON’T RECYCLE

In fact, available stocks of most natural resources are growing rather than shrinking, but the reason is not recycling. Market prices are the best measure of natural resource scarcity. Rising prices imply that a resources is getting more scarce. Falling prices imply that it is becoming more plentiful. Applying this measure to oil, we find that over the past 125 years, oil has become no more scarce, despite our growing use of it. Reserves of other fossil fuels as well as other natural resources are also growing.

Thanks to innovation, we now produce about twice as much output per unit of energy as we did 50 years ago and five times as much as we did 200 years ago. Optical fiber carries 625 times more calls than the copper wire of 20 years ago, bridges are built with less steel, and automobile and truck engines consume less fuel per unit of work performed. The list goes on and on. Human innovation continues to increase the amount of resources at our command.

MYTH 6: RECYCLING ALWAYS PROTECTS THE ENVIRONMENT


United States Environmental Protection Agecny Logo

Recycling is a manufacturing process with environmental impacts. Viewed across a wide spectrum of goods, recycling sometimes cuts pollution, but not always. The EPA has examined both virgin paper processing and recycled paper processing for toxic substances and found that toxins often are more prevalent in the recycling process.

Often the pollution associated with recycling shows up in unexpected ways. Curbside recycling, for example, requires that more trucks be used to collect the same amount of waste materials. Thus, Los Angeles has 800 rubbish trucks rather than 400, because of its curb-side recycling. This means more iron ore and coal mining, steel and rubber manufacturing, petroleum extraction and refining – and of course extra air pollution in the Los Angeles basin.

MYTH 7: RECYCLING SAVES RESOURCES

It is widely claimed that recycling “saves resources.” Proponants usually focus on savings of a specific resource, or they single out particularly successful examples such as the recycling of aluminum cans.

But using less of one resource generally means using more of other resources. Franklin Associates, a firm that consults on behalf of the EPA, has compared the costs per ton of handling rubbish through three methods: disposal into landfills (but with a voluntary drop-off or buy-back program, and an extensive curbside recycling program.

On average, extensive recycling is 35 percent more costly than conventional disposal, and basic curbside recycling is 55 percent more costly than conventional disposal. That is, curbside recycling uses far more resources. As one expert puts it, adding curbside recycling is “like moving from once-a-week garbage collection to twice a week.”

Book Cover

MYTH 8: WITHOUT FORCED RECYCLING MANDATES, THERE WOULDN’T BE RECYCLING

This view reflects ignorance about the extent of recycling in the private sector, which is as old as trash itself. Scavenging may, in fact, be the oldest profession. In the 19th century, people bid for the right to scavenge New York City’s rubbish, and Winslow Homer’s 1859 etching, Scene on the Back Bay Lands, reveals adults and children digging through the detritus of the Boston city dump. Rag dealers were a constant of American life until driven out of business by the federal Wool Products Labeling Act of 1939, which stigmatized products made of recycled wool and cotton. And long before state or local governments had even contemplated the word recycling, makers of steel, aluminum, and many other products were recycling manufacturing scraps, and some were even operating post-consumer drop-off centers.

Recycling is a long-practiced, productive, indeed essential, element of the market system. Informed, voluntary recycling conserves resources and raises our wealth. In sharp contrast, misleading educational programs encourage the waste of resources when they overstate the benefits of recycling. And mandatory recycling programs, in which people are compelled to do what they know is not sensible, routinely make society worse off. Market prices are sufficient to induce the trashman to come, and to make his burden bearable, and neither he no we can hope for any better than that.

PERC Logo

Daniel K. Benjamin is professor of economics at Clemson University, a senior associate of the Political Economy Research Center (PERC), and a regular PERC columnist. This essay is adated from a longer paper, “Eight Great Myths of Recycling,” which is available from PERC.

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EcoWorld - Nature and Technology in Harmony



17 Comments »

  • Pingback by Forced Recycling Fee and Government-Mandated Monopoly (Bountiful) « Utah Rattler
    August 19, 2008 at 9:42 pm - #

    Forced Recycling Fee and Government-Mandated Monopoly; Bountiful, Utah Rattler; coming to a city near you. Eight Great Myths of Recycling by economist Daniel Benjamin.

  • Comment by Andrew
    November 13, 2008 at 11:15 am - #

    I think this article is well established and filled with a wealth of valuable information. However many of the ideas conflict the staments of other articles/websites so we (the uninformed recyclers) cant be sure what to believe anymore.

  • Comment by Pat
    January 5, 2009 at 7:27 pm - #

    It is so hard to discern truth in all this. It seems illogical that it is better to dump reusable materials into landfills and let them sit there forever rather than recycle what we can. Who are we to believe? This is very confusing!

  • Comment by Alan
    January 11, 2009 at 7:17 pm - #

    I really cannot see any point to recycling. There is lots of space in the landfills and the stuff we recycle is very cheap to produce so what is the point?

  • Comment by Janice
    January 22, 2009 at 11:21 am - #

    Many natural resources do not “grow” in any meaningful way, such as sand or oil. The amount of time necessary to create new oil reserves is beyond any useful period for our consumption.

    Plastics, nitrogen fertilizers and so many other products are petroleum-based. Maybe we can come up with plastics made from renewable resources. Until then we are using up a precious resource.

    Why do you think it’s okay to put our non-compostibles into the earth anyway? What a contemptable attitude towards the earth that sustains us.

    Everything we make comes from natural resources. Sustainability is the only model that makes sense. Everything we make should be re-tooled to be reusable . This is the proper role for technology. This is true “harmony.”

  • Comment by Julio
    January 29, 2009 at 8:13 am - #

    Alan, I can see that you are happily ignorant and oblivious to the environmental concerns in the world you live in.

    And…
    As for you Jancie…

    Do you drive a car?
    I think so!
    Well what goes into your car???
    GAS! OIL! People!
    Do you want all those to go away! If you think it is meaningless then start walking to work or school or whereever you go to cause without that stuff you will have to!!!!

    Thank you!!

  • Comment by Evan
    February 8, 2009 at 7:48 am - #

    Uh … attribution?

  • Pingback by SAVING THE WORLD DOESN’T WORK – « The Catskill Conservative
    February 23, 2009 at 12:46 pm - #

    [...] a resource (that is, the effort to pick up, sort and transfer the items to be recycled). Recycling requires more trucks, more crews and more people to oversee the entire process. In Los Angeles alone there are twice as many garbage trucks than [...]

  • Pingback by Great article at cracked.com « Al Jahom’s Final Word
    March 1, 2009 at 4:36 am - #

    [...] a resource (that is, the effort to pick up, sort and transfer the items to be recycled). Recycling requires more trucks, more crews and more people to oversee the entire process. In Los Angeles alone there are twice as many garbage trucks than [...]

  • Pingback by Calling BC on Recycling « Live Greener. Love community. Laugh in Kamloops.
    March 28, 2009 at 9:31 am - #

    [...] And these 8 myths on recycling [...]

  • Pingback by Going Green is Bad for the Environment « But Now You Know
    April 2, 2009 at 1:45 pm - #

    [...] [3] Recycling Myths [...]

  • Pingback by The Greens Are Lying To You….Again « Bob’s Bites
    April 13, 2009 at 7:04 am - #

    [...] Recycling doesn’t matter anyway — almost all laptops are thrown in the trash. Fortunately, there is no shortage of landfill space. In fact, the U.S. has more landfill capacity than ever before. [...]

  • Pingback by Byung Kyu Park’s Personal Website » Recycling Myths
    May 5, 2009 at 1:28 am - #

    [...] published more than 5 years ago, but still every bit [...]

  • Comment by John Sadowski
    August 18, 2009 at 7:57 pm - #


    “Why do you think it’s okay to put our non-compostibles into the earth anyway? What a contemptable attitude towards the earth that sustains us.”

    The earth is full of non-compostibles. Everything we throw into a landfill came from the earth to start with. We don’t create anything, we just reform and relocate it. I will get my non-compostible plastic bag out of the landfill when Mother Nature gets her non-compostible rocks out of my garden.

    See my point? While pollution is a different matter, any non-toxic items that I though in the landfill are fine there. So they take 50,000 years to decompose? So what? It takes up a little room at the landfill, but all those materials were here on this earth to begin with – I jsut relocated them there….

  • Comment by Veronica
    August 30, 2009 at 2:02 pm - #

    You are a big jerk if you don’t recycle!

  • Comment by Jefe
    October 8, 2009 at 6:42 pm - #

    Great job, Veronica. Typical liberal point of view. If someone has a different point of view or doesn’t believe the media hook, line and sinker, then this person is a “jerk.” Why did we allow our gene pool to become so polluted?

    Now you can fire back with an anti-Republican rant, but I’m not Republican. Just a well-informed, self thinker.

  • Comment by realthor
    November 5, 2009 at 10:08 pm - #

    While there would not be any problem throwing into landfills inert materials (in our real world hardly any material we produce can be called inert) the energy they consume to be extracted and manufactured will all be lost. There needs to be a certain amount of energy to recycle those materials but you don’t need to extract them from soil and all the stuff. It takes less energy to recycle than to make again.
    Second point is that almost all materials leach toxic chemicals that ultimately get into the drinking water, fish and so on. Perhaps plastic can be inert but is made with toxic catalysts that leach out. Read the scientific research on leaching toxic chemicals. Almost any man-made material leaches. That’s not good for the environment. And the fact that producing another good is cheap enough is not a point. It’s mostly cheap because much of it price is paid by someone else (environment). You’re paying just a fraction of it. And it’s also cheap because of mass manufacturing, which is a perpetual state of satisfying demand as more gets into the landfills and needs to be replaced.

    Point is that deniers exist all over and this sort of misinformation is simply repugnant.

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