biffingtonjones t1_ixftxt8 wrote
if the product is cleaned out before recycling its most likely being reused in some way. if it was just chucked in the bin right after usage it is trash. since most people don’t rinse out every container before recycling most of it is just garbage with extra steps
costabius t1_ixg297i wrote
That's not how it works.
Glass and metal, it doesn't matter how dirty it is, it gets ground to pieces and melted.
Plastic recycling is complicated, but how dirty the plastic is has no bearing on whether it will be recycled or not.
The only item it does matter for is paper. One greasy pizza box will ruin a ton of cardboard and make it useless. Oil and grease is very hard to separate from paper pulp.
biffingtonjones t1_ixgx7ad wrote
oh weird, guess i’ve been misled. thanks for the correction
nhrunner87 t1_ixh6mdb wrote
It really bothers me when I see pizza places put “recycle me!” on their boxes because in most cases the grease makes it ineligible for recycling. But they don’t clarify that.
sassafrasfruit t1_ixhhw0h wrote
You can compost that greasey cardboard
nhrunner87 t1_ixhkp3k wrote
Yeah good point. Could probably just cut out the section with the grease on it, compost it, and recycle the rest.
UrHumbleNarr8or t1_ixhjida wrote
I wonder if there is a better container to use for pizza?
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