Comment on Costco changed the bag to plastic!!
FelixCress@lemmy.world 13 hours agowithout degrading in quality.
I didn’t say it can. You can still recycle it, just not into the same product.
Comment on Costco changed the bag to plastic!!
FelixCress@lemmy.world 13 hours agowithout degrading in quality.
I didn’t say it can. You can still recycle it, just not into the same product.
ObtuseDoorFrame@lemmy.zip 13 hours ago
Into what? Scotch tape? 2 by 4’s for decking material? One can only make so much of those things before the low demand is met.
Like I said, almost none of it gets recycled because the resulting products are too weak. Not only that, but plastic “recycling” is one of the primary ways that micro plastics get into our bodies.
arstechnica.com/…/yet-another-problem-with-recycl…
altphoto@lemmy.today 12 hours ago
They should use it as filler for potholes. Fibers would composite into stronger flexible quieter roads…or sobI dare to guess.
ObtuseDoorFrame@lemmy.zip 12 hours ago
I would think that could work from a structural point of view, but they would have to seal it somehow to prevent more microplastics from being created. Plastics aren’t often used as a building material because of toxic off-gassing, but of course this would be outside which would mitigate the issue.
Asphalt is one of the most recyclable materials in existence, when they tear up an asphalt road they just melt it down and pour it back on. If there was plastic involved it would probably interrupt this process.
But I’m not expert. Maybe it would work.
altphoto@lemmy.today 12 hours ago
Literally asphalt is junk plastic/petroleum. It dissolves or mixes with plastic at melting temp. Or even if there was no thermal action, the plastic in fiber form would just get incorporated into the melt.