California has long been one of the leading states when it comes to taking steps to improve the environment. As far back as 1990, when 'Green' was becoming a popular concept and gripping the public imagination, the California state government set up the California Integrated Waste Management Board and began to educate the public on California recycling services.
The state government also mandated their municipalities to reduce their waste by a quarter within 5 years, and by half in 10 years. By the 5th year, Californians had achieved their 25% target, and were recycling 80% of their aluminum soft drinks cans - one of the highest rates in the nation. By the turn of the century, even further progress had been made.
It was amid these changing times that Northwest Polymers was established, specifically to provide the commercial and industrial sectors with a route towards cost-efficient and effective recycling in California.
Many of our first clients have stuck with us since our earliest days in 2003, and through our quality services - both to selling and purchasing clients - we have seen our state-wide activities prosper.
Perhaps now, more than ever, commercial and industrial sectors need to find the most reliable and affordable way to dispose of their waste and scrap plastic. This is because in January 2012, the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) adopted the Mandatory Commercial Recycling Regulation, making it compulsory for the commercial sector to make use of recycling facilities.
This new law effects businesses that generate more than 4 cubic yards of commercial solid waste per week, who must subscribe to recycling services to help reduce the pressure on landfill facilities. Essentially, for every business in the state of California, 'recycle' is now a key part of their obligations - not a choice.
Northwest Polymers already has the infrastructure to ensure that services in waste plastic recycling in California reach the highest levels of efficiency. This is because we do more than simply recycle plastic.
We offer the complete logistical service that ensures the minimum of inconvenience caused to you. We will pick up the plastic you no longer need or want, so you have nothing to do but receive our check.
Want to know more about the history of California recycling? Click the read more button below.
Recycling has been around for thousands of years, just look at the chart below to see some of it's history.
People have been recycling for a very long time, but not as long as nature. Our mother earth has been recycling plants, trees, insects, since the begin of time itself. If fact its from this idea that we have a foundation for todays recycling systems.
Why Recycle?
There are many reasons to answer this questions but starting with an understanding of sustainability and the importance of it, is the beginning. Even the earliest humans appreciated the fact that disposing of things improperly often times created health problems.
Today with our modern science we understand that recycling helps conserve limited resources. Recycling also saves
energy, creates jobs, and helps build a strong economy. And it reduces problems associated with litter and trash.
Here is a brief history of recycling, showing how it has developed and how it has become a way of life for millions of Californians.
65 million years ago
As dinosaurs die off and become extinct, they are
recycled info oil and gas. The process takes place as
the decaying remains of dinosaurs - along with other sea
animals and plants - settle on the seabed. Over time, the
animals, plants, mud, and sediment will gradually com-
press into sedimentary rock and change into gas and oil through heat and pressure. Millions of years later, they will be mined and refined into petroleum, plastics, and thousands of other products. ( eventually the recycling of dinosaurs will be embodied in spokes dinosaur "Recycle Rex", created by the California Department of Conservation to promote recycling in 1992)
10,000 B.C.
Nomadic Tribes begin to settle.
they no longer travel from place to place, leaving their garbage behind, they must learn how to dispose
of their trash. The
challenge of what to
do with waste begins.
1,600 B.C.
Religious, utilitarian,
and social conventions
play a major role in
establishing sanitary .
practices in the ancient
world. for example, the
Jewish code of sanitary laws
obligates individuals to be
responsible for removal of their
own waste.
500 B.C.
Athens organizes the
first municipal dumps
in the western world.
local laws dictate
that waste must be disposed
of at least one mile from the city walls.
1031
Japan begins the first recorded use of waste paper for
making new paper. All documents and paper in Japan are
recycled and re-pulped into new paper, sold in paper shops.
1348
The Black Death epidemic reaches Europe from Asia,
spawned in pad by garbage tossed onto unpaved streets
and vacant spaces. The trash became a fertile environment
for diseases carried by rat fleas. Infected humans typically
died within 2 to 10 days. Before it is over, Black Death will
hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children.
1690
The recycled paper manufacturing process is introduced. The Rittenhouse Mill near Philadelphia will make
paper from fiber derived from recycled cotton and linen rags.
1776
As America declares its independence from England,
rebels tum to recycling to provide material to fight the
War of Independence. Silversmith Paul Revere advertises for
scrap metal of all kinds. General George Washington urges the
reuse of old worn chain from frigates. And publisher Benjamin
Franklin uses reconstituted scrap paper in his early printing.
Patriots contribute metal, paper, cloth, and other used items to
the American Revolution. Among other things, iron kettles and
pots are melted down for armaments. Meanwhile, paper use
grows dramatically in the new states. The Massachusetts
House of Representatives passes a decree requiring that all
towns appoint an individual to receive rags for the mills.
1801
The first mill to produce paper from material other than
cotton and linen rags is built in England. Matthias Koops
receives the first patent for ?extracting printing and writing ink
from printed and written paper, and converting the paper from
which the ink is extracted into pulp, and making thereof paper
fit for writing, printing, and other purposes.? Two years later,
the Koops mill declared bankruptcy and closed.
1810
Peter Durand is granted a patent by King George 111 of
England for his idea of preserving food in ?vessels of glass,
pottery, tin, or other metals or fit materials,? launching the
commercially processed food Industry.
1840s
The peddler trade, among America?s earliest
entrepreneurship, begins when men with back-
packs and horse-drawn carts collect and recycle
anything that has resale value. These merchants,
usually impoverished immigrants
to the New World, are
direct ancestors of some of today's successful scrap-recycling business families.
1849
The California Gold Rush and the Civil War create an
urgent need for food that could be preserved for long
periods of time and transported over great distances.
Travelers heading westward to open new settlements took
with them foods packed in metal cans by canners in the East.
The U.S. canning business will boom from an output of five
million cans in 1849 to 30 million five years later.
1865
The Salvation Army is founded in London, England, and
begins collecting, sorting, and recycling unwanted goods. The
organization?s ?Household Salvage Brigades? employ the
unskilled poor to recover discarded materials. The Salvation
Army and its resource recovery activities migrate to the United
States in the 1890s.
1874
Curbside recycling begins - in Balhore, Maryland. Mean-
while in Nottingham, England, a new device called ?the destructor?
provides the first systematic incineration of municipal waste.
1892
The Sierra Club is founded in San Francisco by
renowned conservationist John Muir. It is the first
national environmental organization.
1895
New York City appoints
Colonel George E. Waring
as street-cleaning
commissioner. Known as
the "Apostle of Cleanliness,"
Waring administers the first
practical. comprehensive
system of reuse management in the United States.
The system requires
households to sort organic
wastes, paper,
ashes, and street
sweepings into
separate containers
for collection.
Waring outfits the
proud sweepers
and drivers in
smart-looking white
uniforms. He even
helps New York
profit from source
separation by
reselling recovered
materials.
1897
New York City creates a materials recovery facility
where trash is sorted at "picking yards" and separated into
various grades of paper, metals, and carpet. Burlap bags,
twine, rubber, and even horsehair are also sorted for recycling
or reuse.
1904
The nation's fist aluminum can recycling plants
open in Chicago and Cleveland.
1907
An article in Cosmopolitan magazine, "The Chemical
House That Jack Built," extols the manner in which "every
possible substance we use and throw away comes back as
new and different material - a wonderful cycle of transformation created by scientists' skill."
Early 1900s
Recyclers and reuse programs adopt the phrase
'Waste As Wealth" to describe the profits to be made
from sorting and reselling items found in household trash.
1916
The Chicago city jail initiates a unique recycling
experiment as it puts prisoners to work collecting and
sorting waste materials.
1916-1918
Due to shortages of raw materials during World War I,
the federal government creates the Waste Reclamation
Service with the motto ?Don?t Waste Waste - Save It.? The
agency advertises extensively to encourage the public to save
old rags and wastepaper. The service also advocates scientific
management of the nation?s water, timber, land, and minerals
- early steps in the evolution of progressive programs to
protect resources for future generations.
first time in America, thousands of tons of old books, news-
papers, and business papers are recycled by paper mills.
Meanwhile, Ms. Otheman Stevens initiates an ambitious tin
foil collection program in Los Angeles and becomes the sole
representative of the Red Cross Salvage Bureau.
1920s
Land filling - reclaiming wetlands with layers of garbage, ash,
and dirt -is introduced and becomes a popular disposal method.
1929
The Municipal Garbage Department of Sacramento,
California, increases its annual revenue by selling the
city?s wastepaper to an independent paper company.
The new revenue allows the department to increase garbage
collectors? wages by 25 cents a day.
1935
The first aluminum can for beverages is manufactured
by a brewer in Newark, New Jersey. The can weighed three
ounces. Sixty years later, a process called "light weighting" will
reduce aluminum beverage cans to weigh just one-half ounce.
1939-1945
Thousands of tons of material are recycled to support U.S.
and Allied troops during World War II. The War Production
Board's Salvage Division is responsible for promoting nationwide
recycling. More than 20,000 salvage committees, 400,000
volunteers, and millions of citizens pledge to "Get in the Scrap" to
help the war effort. The salvage of tin, rubber, aluminum, and other
materials is taken very seriously. Citizens contribute everything from
doorknobs to girdles to help build the military machine. The rhetoric
is strong: "If you have even a few pounds of scrap metal in your
home, you are aiding the Axis,"
asserts one wartime magazine
ad. II is said that salvaging
metal straps from corsets alone
saved enough metal to build
two warships.
The Boston General
Salvage Committee helps the
war effort with scrap drives -
advertising the campaign on
streetcars and billboards, and
with informational circulars to
homes. "Special Salvage Days,"
a children's scrap metal contest
involving schools, exhibits in
grocery stores, and a volunteer
women's group known as the
"Salvage Commandos" are also
used to enlist support for the
program.
In a productive
public-private partnership to help
the government's war effort, the
International Harvester Company
coordinates an effort using its
10,000 dealerships nationwide
to collect much of the estimated
three million tons of ferrous scrap
metal lying idle on American
farms. In Chicago, the Herald &
American newspaper enlists the
aid of its 3,000 carrier boys
known as the "Junior Salvage
Commandos" to make personal
house-to-house calls in search of scrap iron.
1948
Market acceptance of frozen orange concentrate leads
to the expansion of the frozen foods industry, with associated
increases in packaging.
1955
The August 1 issue of Life magazine offers a two-page
article on "Throwaway Living." With a photo of a family
cheerfully tossing dozens of disposables into the air, it
celebrated these products' ability to "cut down on household
chores." Consumers are increasingly sold on the idea that
single-use items are necessities of a modem lifestyle. Ease and
convenience become the two most desirable qualities in
product marketing. A negative side-effect: parks, forests, and
highways are littered with trash.
1959
The Amencan Society of Civil Engineers publishes a
guide to landfffling, calling for compacting trash and
covering it daily with a layer of soil to guard against rodents
and odors. Later standards will call for new landfills to have a
liner on the bottom and liquid collection systems that pump
out water for treatment, and to collect methane gas, which is
produced as waste decomposes.
1964
The all-aluminum can is introduced. Recognizing the value
of used aluminum cans as a raw material for making new
cans, the aluminum industry will soon begin creating a
massive system for recycling and redeeming used beverage
containers. U.S. collection will grow from 1.2 billion cans in
1972 to more than 62 billion cans in 1995 through curbside
recycling programs and more than 10,000 recycling centers.
1965
The Solid Waste Disposal Act is passed by Congress, the
first significant recognition of trash as a national issue. The
primary thrust of the act is to ?initiate and accelerate? a
national research and development program and to assist
state and local governments with their disposal programs.
1970
The first national Earth Day is held on April 22. The
brainchild of Wisconsin Senator Gaylord Nelson, it is inspired
by "teach-ins" held to educate citizens about the Vietnam War.
An estimated 20 million Americans celebrate at festivals and
fairs throughout the US. One focus is recycling, which begins
to evolve into a mainstream movement, as recycling and litter
clean-up programs spring up throughout the country. Schools,
religious institutions, environmental organizations, and youth
groups take the lead in these efforts.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is created as
a government response to the public's growing environmental
concerns, and its Office of Solid Waste begins examining the
problems caused by generating and disposing waste. Mean-
while, Congress passes the Resource Recovery Act to shift the
emphasis of federal involvement from disposal to recycling,
resource recovery, and the conversion of waste into energy.
1972
Oregon passes the first "bottle bill" in the US.,
requiring consumers to pay a deposit on bottles and cans,
to be redeemed when the container is recycled.
Meanwhile, aluminum industry efforts lead to a record
53 million pounds of aluminum being recycled this year.
Twenty-five years later, Americans will exceed that amount
every week, with some 119,292 cans recycled every minute
nationwide.
1973
The polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic bottle is
patented by chemist Nathaniel Wyeth, brother of
distinguished American painter Andrew Wyeth. The
bottles will soon begin replacing glass bottles for some uses.
Recycling will begin in 1977, though it will be years before a
significant number of recycling facilities accept PET bottles.
Recycling efforts get a boost in 1991, when Coca-Cola introduces the first recycled-PET soda battle. PET recycling will grow from 8 million pounds in 1979 to 622 million in 1995.
1974
Direct-mail advertising begins to take off, with more
than $5 billion spent to promote credit cards, magazines, and
hundreds of other products. Within 20 years, the industry will
grow to more than $100 billion, with more than 70 billion
pieces of mail delivered annually, about one in seven of which
will be recovered for recycling.
1976
The Federal Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
is passed. Among other things, it mandates that landfills
become more closely monitored. The law emphasizes
recycling and conserving energy and other resources, and
launches the nation?s hazardous waste management program.
1979
?Choices for Conservation,? a report of the Federal
Resource Conservation Committee, warns: ?We have no
cause for complacency about the rate at which we consume
our natural endowment. Our materials-use practices affect
environmental policy, energy consumption, waste generation,
the balance of trade, and other important concerns. individuals, private companies, local government, and the federal
government all make choices every day which affect our use
and conservation of resources.?
1986
California enacts the California Beverage Container
Recycling and Litter Reduction Act, placing a deposit on
aluminum cans and glass and plastic bottles. The program
pushes the state?s overall beverage container recycling rate to
80% by the mid 1990s, with more than 10 billion cans and
bottles recycled annually. Meanwhile, Rhode Island becomes
the first state to pass a mandatory recycling law for aluminum
and steel (?tin?? cans, glass, plastic (PET and HDPE) bottles,
and newspapers. Residents and businesses must now
separate these recyclables from their trash.
1987
The Mobro, a barge carrying garbage from New York, tries
unsuccessfully to get rid of its load in six states and three other
countries. The barge travels 6,000 miles for six months before
it is finally allowed to dump its load, consisting primarily of
paper, back in New York. The event is widely publicized and
brings new interest in recycling as an alternative to land-filling.
In an unrelated incident a year later, hypodermic needles and
other medical waste wash up onto East Coast beaches. The
media begins referring to the situation collectively as a ?solid waste crisis"
1988
Government purchasing policies and technological
breakthroughs advance paper recycling. California state
government allows a price preference for paper with at least
50% recycled and 10% post-consumer content. By the early
?90s, all 50 states adopted legislation or executive orders
favoring recycled paper. In 1993 President Clinton orders
federal agencies to buy paper with at least 20%
post-consumer content.
1989
Arizona archaeologist William Rathje begins the
Garbage Project in which he leads students in ?mining?
local landfills to learn about modem civilization. Among
heir findings: Trash doesn?t break down in landfills.
Students unearth decades-old newspapers that are intact,
and bananas that are still yellow.
1990
The 20th anniversary of Earth Day
marks a pinnacle of the modern environmental movement as millions of citizens worldwide participate in environmental events. Public opinion polls sow environmental protection as a top concern. 50 Things You Can Do to Save the Earth, The Green Consumer,
and other bestsellers join with network TV specials and magazine cover stories to bring a renewed focus on recycling and other conservation efforts.
Collection of recyclables is so prolific that the challenge becomes finding markets for the materials being collected. A new emphasis is placed on ?closing the loop? – buying products made from recycled material.
California state government mandates municipalities to reduce their waste stream by 25% by the year 1995 and 50% by the year 2000. The California Integrated Waste Management Board is established (by Assembly Bill 939 in 1989) to administer the program.
The Environmental Defense Fund, National Recycling Coalition, Environmental Media Association, and other prominent environmental organizations, along with state government agencies in California, Washington, and elsewhere, begin promoting buying recycled-content products as key to the continued success of recycling in the U.S.
1991
The National Football League teams up with the California Department of Conservation,
the city of Pasadena, and the Rose Bowl to implement the first comprehensive recycling program at Super Bowl XXVII.
California observes its first Recycle Week in mid-April. Meanwhile, California Governor George Deukmejian introduces a litter prevention campaign targeting the youthful litterbug. The ad line ?Learn to hold it until you get to the can. Don?t litter.?
1995
Americans recycle a record 47.6 billion soft drink containers,
an increase of 500 million over the previous year. Aluminum cans are recycled at a rate of 63% in the U.S. and 80% in California. There are more than 10,000 recycling centers nationwide and at least 4,000 curbside collection programs. There are more than 400 papers in all grades.
Evidence grows that recycling helps create jobs. For example, the city of San Jose estimates it could cerate 775 jobs by recycling 624,000 tons of material. A study by the California Integrated Waste Management Board calculates that diverting 50% of the state?s waste stream from landfills could create 40,000 new jobs by the year 2000. The California department of Conservation publishes Good, Green Jobs, documenting how companies are creating economic growth through recycling and other environmental initiatives.
Californians achieve a milestone diverting 25% of their waste, meeting the requirements of state law. The California Integrated Waste Management Board intensifies its efforts to help communities, businesses, and families to reduce, reuse, and recycle even more in order to reach the historic 50% reduction by 2000.
Los angeles California is well known for its recycling habits. We are proud to be Los angeles plastic recycling premier choice.