Concrete and steel production are major sources of CO2 emissions, but a new solution from Cambridge could recycle both at the same time. Throwing old concrete into steel-processing furnaces not only purifies iron but produces “reactivated cement” as a byproduct. If done using renewable energy, the…
Did you read what you just wrote? If they don’t recycle the labels, then… yeah, that’s not recycling.
Cherry-picking which part gets recycled and which not, then calling it all “recycling”, is where the brainwashing comes into play.
You may notice that in action on the web I linked, where they call “Recycling” whatever they want, but come up with a different name of “Circular economy” for… let’s see, “re-cycling”… where does that word come from, again?
Did you read what you just wrote? If they don’t recycle the labels, then… yeah, that’s not recycling.
Cherry-picking which part gets recycled and which not, then calling it all “recycling”, is where the brainwashing comes into play.
You may notice that in action on the web I linked, where they call “Recycling” whatever they want, but come up with a different name of “Circular economy” for… let’s see, “re-cycling”… where does that word come from, again?
With concrete it’s even more egregious.