An Environmental Plan A – Caring for God’s Creation, number 3… Recycling

We hear much about recycling, and everyone in Leeds has a Green Bin into which we are supposed to put all our household waste material that can be recycled. Please read the leaflet on recycling that our City Council has recently circulated. Why is this so important? When our various possessions reach the end of their useful lives, whether worn-out or not, we are faced with the tasks of disposal and replacement. If we take a moment to consider the natural world, we can see that nature recycles all of its materials. Dead vegetation decays, and the compost can be returned to the soil. Even large plants like trees are recycled by fungi when they die. Likewise dead animals are cleared up by scavengers.

Mankind however, produces mountains of waste materials, which can be unsightly and cause nasty, polluting effects. At the outset, we take huge quantities of virgin material from the Earth to make our products, and then discard items when we have finished with them. Increasingly, we discard things well before they are worn out, and they may be perfectly serviceable, but we just fancy the latest model. A large advertising industry now exists just to persuade us to continually up-date and to up-grade our stuff. At all costs, we must avoid filling landfill sites, and discarding useful and serviceable items. We must emulate nature, and ‘close the loop’.

What can we do?

  • If you have items to dispose of consider donating them to a good cause such as St Gemma’s hospice, or St George’s Crypt, rather than selling them on e-bay. Last year St. Gemma’s raised 25% of their annual running costs via their chain of charity shops. They will take books, CD’s, items of clothing, household goods, TV sets, etc.
  • Items of furniture can be given to the Leeds and Moortown furniture store.
  • Recycle as much household waste as you can. The Leeds City Council green bin will take paper and card, empty food tins, foil trays, tops from jam and preserve jars, drink cans, empty aerosols such as hair spray, deodorant, biscuit and sweet tins, etc.
  • Most plastic items carry the little recycling triangle symbol. Those bearing the numbers 1, 2 and 4, can be put into your green bin. Plastic magazine wrappers can be recycled at Sainsbury’s Moortown store. I have seen all these being recycled into useful, durable plastic products for the construction industry.
  • Take empty bottles and jars to the bottle bank, they can be recycled as cullet to make more glass.

Why is this important?

If we recycle and re-use our materials, we reduce the demand for virgin materials that have to be extracted from nature. The extracting, transporting, and processing of materials consumes huge amounts of energy. If we recycle, we are saving both materials and energy, and cutting down on pollution – we are caring for God’s creation.

John Sturges                 j.sturges@leedsbeckett.ac.uk;

Julia Hyliger                 julia.hyliger@hotmail.co.uk;

April 2017

1 thought on “An Environmental Plan A – Caring for God’s Creation, number 3… Recycling”

  1. Waste and Pollution is not our only environmental problem. Dwindling resource is a more serious problem in the long term, considering how fast this generation is consuming the Earth’s resources.
    I have seen people using recycled material wastefully, e.g. blue wiping tissues, because they think if it is recycled it is alright.
    We have to bear in mind recycling itself consumes resources and produces pollution of its own.
    The key is to reduce consumption, and reuse, not just recycling.

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