Eco Dirt Environment Blog     .    .    .    .    .     .    .    .    .    .   .  Keetsa Eco-Friendly and Green Mattresses     Buy Starbucks Here!

Vehicles are Recycled More Than Any other Consumer Item

What’s Recycled More Than Any Other Item in the U.S.? Cars. According to statistics published by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on its Web site, 50 percent of all paper, 34 percent of all plastic soft drink bottles, 45 percent of all aluminum beer and soft drink cans, 63 percent of all steel packaging and 67 percent of all major appliances are now recycled. More than any of these, however, is a consumer item whose recycling percentage and trail goes far beyond the municipal waste yard. It’s your car or truck, when it’s no longer usable.

Today, more than 95 percent of all vehicles in the United States go through a market-driven recycling infrastructure, with no added cost or tax to consumers. More than 84 percent, by weight, of each end-of-life vehicle (ELV) is recycled.

Better yet, the United States Council for Automotive Research’s (USCAR) Vehicle Recycling Partnership (VRP), composed of DaimlerChrysler AG, Ford Motor Company and General Motors Corporation, is working with the U.S. Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory and the Plastics Division of the American Chemistry Council to raise the recycling percentage of each ELV to as close to 100 percent as conceivably possible.

The group is now in its fourth year of its third Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA), and it has been working to maximize vehicle recycling in the United States since its first CRADA in 1991.

Thus far, the CRADA team impact has been broad and diverse and includes:

— Establishing and publishing preferred practices for recycling.

— Establishing efficient fluid removal processes.

— Running a licensed Vehicle Recycling Development Center to establish procedures that optimize materials recovery in vehicle dismantling.

— Researching separation technologies for commingled material streams.

— Initiating efforts targeted at removing substances of concern from shredder residue, regardless of its source.

A plastics sorting Pilot Plant in operation at Argonne is one of the more visible demonstrations of the CRADA team’s research in action. “While the CRADA team is benchmarking and evaluating a range of technology options for sustainable recycling of ELV, the facility at Argonne serves as a focal point for the team’s work,” said Ed Daniels, director, Energy Systems Division at Argonne and head of the vehicle recycling research effort at the Lab.

The team also is working to anticipate and meet the recycling needs for components and parts in future and emerging vehicles such as hybrids and fuel cell vehicles.

The research is funded by the VRP, the Plastics Division of the American Chemistry Council and U.S. DOE Office of FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies.

The VRP is part of the United States Council for Automotive Research, under which DaimlerChrysler AG, Ford Motor Company and General Motors Corporation cooperatively address shared technological and environmental concerns.

Argonne National Laboratory is a U.S. Department of Energy laboratory managed by UChicago Argonne, LLC. Argonne’s mission is to serve the nation by advancing the frontiers of knowledge and by providing innovative and effective approaches and solutions to energy, environmental, and security challenges.

The Plastics Division of the American Chemistry Council, a leading trade association of resin producers, advocates unlimited opportunities for plastics and promotes their economic, environmental and societal benefits.

For more information, visit http://www.uscar.org/.

  • Best Green Blogs
    Eco Friendly, Environment & Green Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
    Blog Flux Local
    Add to Technorati Favorites
    Brighter Planet's 350 Challenge