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Environment
Waste-to-Energy and Recycling
Over the past thirty years, communities across the nation have turned to
source reduction, recycling, and waste-to-energy to manage their municipal solid
waste.
During that time, the percentage of trash that is recycled has grown from 10
percent to a national average of 28 percent and the amount of trash that is
managed in waste-to-energy plants has grown from 9 percent to 13 percent.
At
the local
level, communities that have built waste-to-energy plants have an average recycling
rate of more than 33 percent, 18 percent higher than the national average.
In fact, many of the most successful recycling programs in the country are located
in communities that have a waste-to-energy facility.
In addition, waste-to-energy
facilities annually recycle more than 700,000 tons of ferrous metals and another
450,000 tons of glass, metals, paper, plastics, yard waste, etc.
The article, Recycling
and Waste-to-Energy: The ongoing compatibility success story, provides
additional information on this subject.
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