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Wise and CTR Each to Help State-wide Effort in New York to Promote Clothing Recycling

Wise and CTR Each to Help State-wide Effort in New York to Promote Clothing Recycling


Bel Air, Maryland (PRWEB) September 30, 2014

The Secondary Materials and Recycled Textiles Association (Intelligent) and its sister organization, the Council for Textile Recycling (CTR) have each agreed to sponsor an educational campaign becoming presented by the New York State Association for Reduction, Reuse and Recycling (NYSAR3) . The Boards of Directors of each Wise and CTR voted in favor of delivering monetary and public relations support for the November campaign that will launch in conjunction with America Recycles Day on November 15.

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“The state-wide work to market the recycling of used clothes and other textiles being developed by NYSAR3 is a great step forward in educating the public about the importance of maintaining used clothes out of landfills,” says Jackie King, Executive Director of Wise. “The textile recycling market has been reusing and recycling clothes, sheets, towels, shoes, and other textile items for far more than one hundred years. Clothing was being recycled extended prior to the environment became such an critical issue to so numerous individuals.”

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Sensible is the international trade association of the for-profit textile and used clothes recycling sector, although the Council for Textile Recycling functions to bring with each other all aspects of clothes recycling such as companies, retailers, shoppers, academicians, and municipal personnel.

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“People don’t realize that 95% of all utilised clothing and household textiles can be recycled,” says Eric Stubin, President of the Council for Textile Recycling. “If the items aren’t reused as clothing, they can be reduce into industrial wiping or polishing cloths, or they could be shredded and processed back to their original fiber content. Those fibers are then utilized to manufacture new items such as household insulation, auto soundproofing material, carpet padding, stuffing for sports gear or pet bedding, and several other merchandise.”

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According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s most recent report on municipal strong waste (2012), 14.33 million tons of waste is generated annual that is exclusively clothing and other household textiles of this quantity 2.25 million tons, only 15.7%, is recycled.1

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In the very same study, the EPA calculated the influence the existing level of recycling has Greenhouse Gases in the United States. The EPA report indicates the two.25 million tons of textiles are currently recycled annually is the equivalent of removing 1.two million vehicles from America’s highways. This is far more than five-occasions the impact of recycled yard trimmings (170 thousand vehicles removed) is a lot more than four-instances the effect of glass recycling (210 thousand automobiles removed) a lot more than plastic recycling (670 thousand cars removed) and is almost equal to the influence of aluminum recycling (1.three million automobiles removed).two

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For added information, speak to Paul Bailey at the Fallston Group at 410-420-2001 or by e mail at paul.bailey(at)fallstongroup(dot)com.

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Source:&#13

1Table 1, Web page 6. Municipal Strong Waste Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the United States: Information and Figures for 2012.

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two Table five, Page 11. Municipal Strong Waste Generation, Recycling, and Disposal in the United States: Details and Figures for 2012.

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About&#13

Secondary Components and Recycled Textiles (Smart) is an international nonprofit trade association that strengthens the financial possibilities of its diverse membership by advertising the interdependence of our industry segments and delivering a typical forum for networking, education and trade. Since 1932, Intelligent has been at the forefront of recycling. Wise members use and convert recycled and secondary supplies from utilised clothing, commercial laundries and non-woven, off spec material, new mill ends and paper from around the planet. Smart member firms create thousands of jobs worldwide. Smart members prove every day that you can make funds by getting socially accountable.

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For extra info on Wise, check out the association’s website at http://www.SMARTasn.org. The following hyperlink will take you directly to informational videos on textile recycling http://www.smartasn.org/about/videos.cfm.

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Electronic Recycling Market (Copper, Steel, Plastic Resins): Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 2013 – 2019

Electronic Recycling Market (Copper, Steel, Plastic Resins): Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 2013 – 2019


Albany, New York (PRWEB) August 20, 2014

According to a new market report published by Transparency Market Research “Electronic Recycling (Copper, Steel, Plastic resins) Market – Global Industry Analysis, Size, Share, Growth, Trends and Forecast 2013 – 2019”, the market was valued at USD 9.84 billion in 2012, which is expected to reach USD 41.36 billion by 2019, growing at a CAGR of 23.06% from 2013 to 2019. In terms of volume, the market was 48.43 million tons in 2012 and is forecast to reach 141.05 million tons by 2019. In terms of volume, Europe was the largest recycler of e-waste and Asia Pacific is expected to be the fastest growing market for electronic recycling during the forecast period, growing at a CAGR of 22.8% from 2013 to 2019. Lack of efficient government regulations made Asia Pacific a collection point for global e-waste. Availability of abundant volume of e-waste and cheap labor is expected to drive Asia Pacific electronic recycling market.

Browse Global Electronic Recycling Market Report with full TOC: http://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/electronics-recycling-market.html.

The global electronic recycling market is expected to be driven by implementation of stringent government regulations, environment sustainability programs, and rapid industrialization. End of life management of electronic product involve refurbishment of functional components and recycling of waste scrap. Despite numerous benefits of recycling, lack of regulatory and recycling infrastructure has hampered the growth of this market. In addition, lack of consumer awareness regarding electronic recycling market and no incentive policy for consumers has restricted the growth of electronic recycling market.

Out of all equipments being recycled, computer was the largest segment in 2012 and is forecast to maintain its dominance in future. This attributes to rapid microchip developments and decrease in average lifecycle of computers. Numerous take back events organized by leading telecom players are expected boost the electronic recycling market. For example, in 2008 Nokia started its e-waste management campaign when waste management was given little attention. Based on sources of electronic equipment commercial sector were highest contributors to recycling market in 2012. This accounts to the infrastructural developments across developing economies. Globally steel was the most recycled material from electronic scrap because steel is heavily used in electronic devices and cost fluctuations of mined steel made manufacturers adopt closed loop practice which involves using recycled steel back into China manufacturing of new products. Additionally, recycling steel is much cheaper compared to mining steel. In terms of revenue, recycled steel accounted for 33.7% of the global electronic recycling market in 2012.

Geographically, Europe dominated e-waste recycling market in 2012. This is attributed to stringent legal directives and regulations to recover recycle and reuse e-waste. In North America, around 65% of U.S. residents are governed by e-waste law. Though there is no mandatory recycling regulation in the U.S. 25 states across the U.S. have ratified several regulations that require statewide e-waste recycling. Emerging economies in Asia Pacific such as Korea, Taiwan, India, China and Japan are expected to be fastest growing for electronic recycling. This growth is majorly driven by abundance of e-waste in Asia pacific and cheap labor availability.

The global electronic recycling market is highly fragmented and contains numerous small scale players. However, Sims Metal Management hold majority of shares of electronic recycling market. Major industry participants include Eco-Tech Environmental Services Inc., AERC Recycling Solutions, American Retroworks Inc., CRT Recycling Ltd., Dlubak Glass Company, Fortune Plastic & Metal, Inc., MBA Polymers, Inc., Sims Metal Management Limited, Universal Recyclers Technologies, A2Z Group.

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The market has been segmented as follows:

Electronic Recycling Market, by type of processed material

Copper
Steel
Plastic resins
Polycarbonate
Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS)
Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS)
High impact polystyrene (HIPS)
Polystyrene –
Others
Others (zinc, tin, nickel, lead, aluminum, gold, silver, so on)

Electronic Recycling Market, by type of processed material used as stock

Copper
Steel
Plastic resins
Polycarbonate
Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS)
Acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS)
High impact polystyrene (HIPS)
Polystyrene –
Others
Others (zinc, tin, nickel, lead, aluminum, gold, silver, so on)

Get report sample PDF copy from here: http://www.transparencymarketresearch.com/sample/sample.php?flag=S&rep_id=601.

Electronic Recycling Market, by type of equipment processed

Computers
Telecom
Industrial
Consumer
Others

Electronic Recycling Market, by source of equipment

Consumers/residential
Manufacturers/Industry users
Government agencies
Schools/universities
Commercial

Electronic Recycling Market, by geography

North America
Europe
Asia Pacific
RoW

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