this post was submitted on 19 May 2024
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The memes of the climate
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Recycling is literally the least important thing you can do (despite still being important).
The phrase "refuse, reduce, reuse, repurpose, recycle" is listed in order of importance.
I hate that they added more shit. "Reduce, reuse, recycle" was perfect.
"refuse" is literally the same thing as "reduce"
"repurpose" is a subset of "recycle"
What the fuck is it nowadays with wanting to tack on more useless shit to perfect mnemonics? Especially for a mnemonic whose entire point is to prevent wastefulness.
Repurpose is reuse, just for a different use than originally intended.
Your point about reduce, reuse, recycle being enough is absolutely correct and all I ever hear about is the recycle part which is counterproductive when it is used to justify mass consumption and disposable products.
Cause people often misunderstand the meaning of words.
I'd think 'repurpose' is part of 'reuse' rather than recycle. Doesn't recycle mean that you're going to destroy the object to extract its raw resources to be made into a new product? Whereas 'reuse' just means that you are going to use it again. I'd say 'repurpose' means you are going to use it again, but not in the same way it was used the first time.
In any case, I agree that the added words are unnecessary. Maybe they were added to deliberately weaken the slogan. Sometimes people deliberately try to make sustainable living sound like a lot of work, by adding a whole lot of extra steps and conditions.
Repurpose is also similar to recycle though.
Because recycling's entire point is to repurpose it into something else...
Which might be why people also want repurpose... but I'm old and RRR is better than RRRRR. A mnemonics entire point is ease of memory.
Recycle reuse damnit!
It is also important to mention that most plastic recycling still ends up in landfills. Plastic recycling was sold as myth by big oil and plastics companies to make consumers think the waste problems magically disappeared.
Just missing "revolution" in that list
Based on what do you say that? Any sources?
https://sustainability.uconn.edu/2020/04/07/the-three-rs-order-is-important/
https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/before-you-recycle-choose-to-reuse
Hm, those are just saying it too, without data to back that up.
I mean, it's really more of an intuitive kind of thing: recycling takes more than zero energy, while refusing or reducing take less than zero.
Okay, let's look at it again: refuse - not buying it at all reduce - buy less reuse - use a thing multiple times for the same purpose repurpose - use a thing for a different purpose recycle - recovering (parts) of things
Why is buying less, without even specifying how much, automatically better than recycling (more of) the mountain of stuff anyone uses to live? (Note the indirect impact too, just because someone is rich and can outsource their impact does not make the net impact lower)
Also, many would see reuse and repurpose as forms of recycling. Like making trash bags from recycled plastic.
This is a complex topic and everything but simple.
Why is it better to make a smaller mountain of trash rather than figure out what to do with that trash?
The point is that dealing with trash takes time and energy, and if you want to be efficient about it you'd try to make as little trash as possible so you don't need to deal with it later. You might not see much of a benefit on an individual scale, but across an entire city it can make a huge difference.
If you're still not getting it, just compare the EPA's website for Reduce and Reuse versus Recycle
EU Waste Framework Directive
https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/waste-and-recycling/waste-framework-directive_en
Recycling is not at the bottom there and generally it is not the same argument (not showing the different impacts of these things).
The bottom is disposal, and recovery is energy recovery - as in, burning it. Part of the disposal process.
Yes, recycling is the bottom for what individuals can do.
I should have known that my comment needed a "/s" at the end....