we have all been told to \u201creduce, reuse, and recycle\u201d at least once in our lives. those three magic words have always made it seem easy to help keep the planet clean. however, rising recycling issues mean the u.s. has to change its strategies toward waste, according to a new state of recycling survey<\/a> conducted by u.s. public interest research group education fund.<\/p>\n
the report brings an honest interpretation of the current state of the recycling industry and just how many levels in which it is faltering. especially since countries in eastern asia have started to refuse accepting recyclables from the united states,<\/a> according to media reports. in a press release from the public interest network, which operates more than 15 organizations including the u.s. pirg, several states have been \u201cfailing to both reduce unnecessary waste and to adjust to a changing recycling landscape.\u201d<\/p>\n
at the 2019 planet forward summit<\/a>, tom szaky, the founder and ceo of terracycle<\/a>, addressed how recycling is not enough in solving the waste problem. it is also going to take clean-up efforts and rethinking single-use items in its entirety. <\/p>\n
truelove offers what he thinks needs to be done in order to solve the waste problem.<\/p>\n
see the full state of recycling national survey<\/a> (pdf).<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"