YOU Can Help By
Doing The Three R's...
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Everybody needs food, clothes, a warm house, books and many
other things. To get these things people...
* Cut down trees to
make wood and paper products
* Clear forests to grow grass for sheep and cattle
* Build factories that pollute the air and water
And we still throw
away things that can be used again!
We must Reduce,
Reuse and Recycle! |
Every year, the average
New Zealander throws away:
* 160 cans
* 107 glass bottles
* 45 kilograms of plastic
* 2 trees worth of paper products |
A typical household rubbish
bag could contain up to 93% recyclable material...
*55% garden/kitchen waste, which can be composted
*21% paper, which can be recycled
*8% plastics, some of which can be recycled
*5% glass, most of which can be recycled
*4% metals, most of which can be recycled
*7% other |
How YOU can Reduce, Reuse and Recycle!
Reduce means... having fewer new things - this saves you
money and reduces pollution and waste going in to the environment. Reducing also means
choosing things with the least amount of packaging.
Say 'no bag needed
thank you' when you are shopping - take your own bag or back-pack to use instead
Be careful with your
things and if they get broken try fixing them before buying new stuff
Before buying new
things, think whether you really need them - or maybe a second-hand one will be just as
good!
Get refill packs of
cleaners and detergents (refill packs save about 60% of the plastic needed for a new
squeezy bottle - and saves money too)
Take a home-made
lunch to school - rather than buying lots of things that have heaps of packaging.
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Reuse means... thinking before you throw things away -
Can it be used again? Would someone else be able to use it? If you can't reuse it, maybe someone else can. Swap, sell
or donate items such as toys, clothing, furniture, sports gear, tapes and records.
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Clean out jam jars and use them to put pens and things in. You might like to
decorate some jars and put flowers in them - this will make a great present for someone. |
Give away clothes you don't like or
have grown out of, and buy clothes from the second hand store - you will find some great
bargains!
Collect used writing paper and
photocopier paper with only one side used. Use the other side for scribble pads, drawings,
notes... or even for writing more letters.
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Recycling means... sorting your waste so it can be turned into
new things.
Start a
compost bin - Food scraps go in the
compost bin and worms LOVE food scraps. The worms eat up the food scraps and make new,
healthy soil, which is good for putting in the garden. If you would like more information about composting you can contact your city,
district or regional council or to Forest and Bird.
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- Kerbside recycling - some cities have recycling bins that you
can buy from the city council. This makes it very easy to recycle at home because all you
need to do is put all the things for recycling in the bin and then put the bin out on the
kerbside to be collected. Contact your local
council for a brochure about what you can recycle - make sure you put the bin out on the
correct day!
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There may be a recycling
collection depot near where you live. The recycling collection depot is a place
where you can take all of the things to be recycled. You will need to phone your city,
district or regional council to find out where the closest one to your house is. If your city or town does not have kerbside recycling or a
recycling depot, you will need to write LOTS of letters to the Mayor, who is in charge of
your city or district council. Your letters will need to explain that you need a kerbside
recycling collection. |
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