Please visit www.earth911.org or contact your local public works department.
To get started, contact your office building management company or waste hauler to see what materials can be collected from your building. For detailed information on how to start a successful office recycling program, visit the many resources in Recycling: in the workplace.
In 2007, a record 56 percent (54.3 million tons) of the paper consumed in the U.S. was recovered for recycling. This is an impressive number, but there is more that needs to be done. The U.S. paper industry has set a 60 percent recovery goal by 2012. Please visit our statistics section to learn more about the recovery rates of particular paper grades, along with information on what new products are made from the recovered materials.
The recycling process can begin at any number of locations, including community curbside programs, drop-off centers, schools, or offices.
After the paper is collected, it is transferred to a recycling center or Material Recovery Facility (MRF), where contaminants such as glass, plastics, paperclips, and staples are removed. Once the recovered paper is free of contaminants, it is baled and transported to a paper mill where the recycling process begins.
To begin the papermaking process using recovered fiber, the fiber is shredded and mixed with water to make a pulp. The pulp is washed, refined, and cleaned, then turned to slush in a beater. Color dyes, coatings, and other additives are mixed in, and the pulp slush is pumped onto a large moving screen. Computers and special sensors monitor each step of the papermaking process.
As the pulp travels down the screen, water is drained away and recycled. The resulting crude paper sheet, also known as web, is pressed between massive rollers to extract most of the remaining water and to ensure smoothness and uniform thickness. The semidry web is then run through heated dryer rollers to remove any remaining water.
Wastewater is carefully treated before it is released or reused. Fiber particles and chemicals are filtered out and often burned in an on-site cogeneration plant that helps to meet the energy needs of the facility, and, in some cases, of the local community.
The finished paper is then wound into large rolls, which can be 30 feet wide and weigh close to 25 tons. A slitter cuts the paper into smaller, more manageable rolls, and the paper is ready for use in your school, workplace, and community.
For more information on the papermaking process, visit Paper Recycling: Curbside to Consumer.
Please contact your office building management company or waste hauler to see what materials can be collected from your building. For detailed information on how to start a successful office recycling program, visit the many resources in Recycling: in the workplace.
Please visit either Recycling Today or Resource Recycling to search for a recycling bin supplier.
The AF&PA Recycling Awards recognize outstanding individual, business, community, and school recycling efforts.
The American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA) offers a variety of posters, brochures, videos, and guides for school, community, and workplace recycling. The materials are available to download and order in Order Materials.
AF&PA has also teamed-up with Scholastic to create an on-line resource on paper recycling for teachers. Visit, Recycling Starts with You!, to download activities tied to the national standards; a classroom poster; and take-home materials.