Recycled Cardboard | Recycled Paper | FAQ’s

Recycled Cardboard | Recycled Paper | FAQ’sRecycled Cardboard | Recycled Paper | FAQ’s

You make use of paper and paperboard goods each calendar day, beginning with newspapers to food wrapping to office paper. In truth, paper and paperboard goods make up the biggest share of the municipal solid waste stream in the United States and as a consequence, present the best opportunity to recycle. Discover additional facts and figures and other information about paper recycling in the answers to, “Frequent Ask Questions”, below. You may as well want to learn about the basics of paper recycling.
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Paper Recycling Facts and Figures

Other Frequent Questions about Paper Recycling


Facts and Figures

How much paper and paperboard is recycled every year?

  • Paper accounts for more than 1/3 of all recyclables collected in the US, by weight. Nearly 44,000,000 million tons of paper and paperboard were recovered in 2006—a recycling rate of over 50 percent.
  • About 88 % of newspaper and 72 % of corrugated cardboard were recovered in 2006.
  • In 2007, the amount of paper recovered for recycling averaged 360 pounds for each person living in the US, according to the American Forest & Paper Association.

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How much paper do we use in the United States each year?

  • About 85 million tons of paper and paperboard.
  • Each year, more than 2 billion books, 350 million magazines, and 24 billion newspapers are published.
  • The average American uses approximately one 100-foot-tall Douglas fir tree in paper and wood products per year.

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How much paper do offices use?

The average office worker in the US uses 10,000 sheets of copy paper each year. That’s four million tons of copy paper used annually. Office workers in the US generate approximately two pounds of paper and paperboard products every day.

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What can recovered paper be used for?

Almost 37 percent of the fiber used to make new paper products in the US came from recycled sources in 2007. See the uses of recovered paper.

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What are the recycling rates for different recovered paper grades?

In 2006, the recycling rates for different recovered paper grades were as follows :

  • Newspapers: 88 percent
  • Corrugated boxes: 72 percent
  • Office paper: 66 percent
  • Magazines: 41 percent
  • Telephone directories: 19 percent

Source:

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Does all that recovered paper stay in the US?

In 2007, 35 percent of recovered paper was exported to overseas markets. About 62 percent stayed in the US to be recycled into paper and paperboard products. The remainder was used to make other non-paper products.

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Where do the papermaking materials come from?

In the United States, they come from three primary sources:

  • Recycled paper: 33 percent
  • Whole trees and other plants: 33 percent
  • Wood chips and scraps from sawmills: 33 percent

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Other Frequent Questions

How is paper recycled?

Find out at the Paper University.

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Which states have the best access to recycling programs?

The prevalence of available recycling program varies across the country. See the amount of paper recycling that is going on in your state.

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Can a piece of paper be recycled indefinitely?

No, every time paper is recycled, the fibers get shorter. After being recycled five to seven times, the fibers become too short to bond into new paper. New fibers are added to replace the unusable fiber that wash out of the pulp during the recycling process. A single sheet of paper may contain new fibers as well as fibers that have already been recycled several times.

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What products can be made from recycled paper?

Besides easily recognizable paper products (e.g, writing paper or paper towels), more than 5,000 products can be made from recycled paper, including:

  • Masking tape
  • Paper money
  • Globes
  • Bandages
  • Dust masks
  • Hospital gowns
  • Coffee filters
  • Lamp shades
  • Car insulation
  • Animal bedding
  • Planting pots for seedlings
  • Egg cartons

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Who invented paper and when?

T’sai Lun in 105 AD a Chinese eunuch, who is traditionally regarded as the inventor of paper and the papermaking process, in forms recognizable in modern times as paper (as opposed to Egyptian papyrus). Although paper existed in China before Cai Lun (since the 2nd century BC), he was responsible for the first significant improvement and standardization of papermaking by adding essential new materials into its composition. To find out more facts about paper visit invented paper.

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Are staples, sticky notes, and paper clips okay to recycle okay to recycle?

Paper mills that process recovered paper are set up to remove common contaminants such as staples and paper clips from the pulped paper. Therefore, it is not necessary to remove such items before recycling the paper, although paper clips and binder clips can be removed and reused.

If your recycling program accepts mixed paper, sticky notes are usually recyclable – but not always. Any mill that is able to process mixed paper can remove the adhesives found on sticky notes.

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