Recycling Is Important—but Buying Less Is Better
Recycling Is Important—but Buying Less Is Better The Greenest Bin Is Often the One You Never Fill Recycling has become one of the most visible signs of environmental responsibility. We separate glass, cardboard, tins and plastics. We wash containers, flatten boxes and wheel our recycling bins to the kerb. It feels like a positive action—and it is. But recycling can also give us a false sense that our responsibility begins and ends at the bin. A product does not become environmentally harmless simply because a recycling symbol appears on the packaging. Before it reaches our home, raw materials have been extracted, processed, manufactured, packaged and transported. Energy has been used at every stage. Water may have been consumed, habitats disturbed and emissions produced. Recycling may recover some of those materials, but it cannot undo everything that happened before the product entered our shopping basket. That is why the greenest bin is often the one we never fill. The real env...