Current:Home > StocksWant to Help Reduce PFC Emissions? Recycle Those Cans -TradeGrid
Want to Help Reduce PFC Emissions? Recycle Those Cans
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:13:59
Aluminum, unlike plastic, is infinitely recyclable. An aluminum can you drink from today may have been a different aluminum can just months ago and, if continually recycled, could be used to make a can 20 years from now.
“That’s your grandchild’s aluminum,” Jerry Marks, a former research manager for Alcoa said, recalling how he chastises his grandchildren whenever he sees them tossing aluminum cans in the trash. “You can’t be throwing that away.”
Aluminum is sometimes called “frozen electricity” because so much power is required to smelt, or refine, alumina into aluminum. Recycled aluminum doesn’t require smelting and uses only 5 percent of the amount of electricity as “primary” aluminum, according to a study published earlier this year in the journal Progress in Materials Science. What’s more, melting aluminum for reuse doesn’t emit any perfluorocarbons, greenhouse gases that remain in the atmosphere for tens of thousands of years.
Related: Why American Aluminum Plants Emit Far More Climate Pollution Than Some of Their Counterparts Abroad
Less than half of all aluminum cans, some 45 percent, are recycled in the U.S. today, according to a 2021 report by industry groups the Aluminum Association and the Can Manufacturers Institute. This compares with just 20 percent for plastic bottles, which are typically recycled into other products such as carpet or textiles that are less likely to be recycled at the end of their useful lives, according to the report.
However, some states do a better job at recycling aluminum cans than others. Currently 10 states place deposits on cans and bottles that can be redeemed when the container is recycled. States with such programs recycle aluminum cans at a rate more than twice that of states without deposit programs, Scott Breen, vice president of sustainability at the Can Manufacturers Institute, said.
Last year, the Institute, a trade association of U.S. manufacturers and suppliers of metal cans, and the Aluminum Association, which represents producers of primary aluminum and recycled aluminum, set a target of recycling 70 percent of all aluminum cans in the U.S. by 2030 and 90 percent by 2050.
“The only way we’re going to achieve those targets is with new, well-designed deposit systems,” Breen said.
Ten additional states have introduced recycling deposit bills this year and Breen said he anticipates a similar bill will be introduced at the federal level in 2023. Yet similar bills have been introduced in the past without becoming law. The last time a so-called “bottle bill” passed was in Hawaii in 2002. Historically, the beverage industry opposed such bills, which they viewed as an unfair tax. However, such opposition is beginning to change, Breen said.
“Beverage brands have set recycling and recycled content targets and state governments have set recycled content minimums, none of which will be achieved without significantly higher recycling rates,” he said. “I think people are taking a more serious look at this than in the past.”
Aluminum use in the U.S. is expected to continue to grow in the coming years and decades as more vehicles, like Ford’s F-150 and the all-electric F-150 Lightning are made with entirely aluminum bodies. The strong, lightweight metal offsets the increased weight of additional batteries in all-electric vehicles while helping to decrease a vehicle’s energy needs.
Recycled aluminum makes up 80 percent of U.S. aluminum production, according to the Aluminum Association. While recycled aluminum won’t be able to provide all of our aluminum needs, each can that is recycled is one less can that comes from smelting.
veryGood! (6635)
Related
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Rihanna Reveals the “Stunning” Actress She’d Like to Play Her in a Biopic
- African elephants have individual name-like calls for each other, similar to human names, study finds
- YouTube Star Ben Potter’s Cause of Death Revealed
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Special counsel David Weiss says Hunter Biden verdict about illegal choices, not addiction
- Biden reacts to his son Hunter's guilty verdict in gun case, vowing to respect the judicial process
- Idaho police force loses millions worth of gear and vehicles in fire
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- National Amusements ends Paramount merger talks with Skydance Media
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Biden reacts to his son Hunter's guilty verdict in gun case, vowing to respect the judicial process
- Pamela Smart accepts responsibility in husband's 1990 murder for first time
- Chrysler recalls over 200,000 SUVs, trucks due to software malfunction: See affected vehicles
- Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
- Thefts of charging cables pose yet another obstacle to appeal of electric vehicles
- A jet carrying 5 people mysteriously vanished in 1971. Experts say they've found the wreckage in Lake Champlain.
- Supreme Court has a lot of work to do and little time to do it with a sizeable case backlog
Recommendation
Sam Taylor
Well-known North Texas pastor steps away from ministry due to sin
Supermarket gunman’s lawyers say he should be exempt from the death penalty because he was 18
American investor Martin Shkreli accused of copying and sharing one-of-a-kind Wu-Tang Clan album
Small twin
Supermarket gunman’s lawyers say he should be exempt from the death penalty because he was 18
Chefs from the Americas are competing in New Orleans in hopes of making finals in France
These $18.99 Swim Trunks Are an Amazon Top-Seller & They’ll Arrive by Father’s Day