Recycling Carpets and
Rugs
Over 5 million homes replace their
carpet each year. Carpet provides added warmth to save energy,
protects your flooring, decreases air pollution, as well as
increasing the value of your home.
We all like the feel of soft
carpet under our feet. It is a feeling of comfort, warmth and
luxury. But next time you rip up your old rugs to lay down new
carpet, spare a thought for the fate of your old floor
covering.
Most used carpet ends up in a
landfill. While it represents less than 3 percent of the
overall volume of waste landfilled each year, more than 4.5
billion pounds of carpet were thrown away in the United States
in 2004 alone, according to estimates from the Dalton,
Ga.-based Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI).
Given the growing scarcity of
landfill space and the recognition that recycling and
sustainable manufacturing processes can actually make business
as well as environmental sense, a large number of carpet
manufacturers signed a Memorandum of Understanding for Carpet
Stewardship (MOU) in 2002. Its main goal is lofty - a landfill
diversion rate of 40 percent by 2012. This target is viewed as
a step towards a continuing commitment by the carpet industry
for the eventual eradication of not only disposal in a
landfill, but also incineration and incineration with energy
recovery (waste-to-energy) of waste carpet.
Wilmington, Deleware, operates the
oldest planned carpet recycling program, accepting carpet
regardless of fiber type, manufacturer or backing type.
Post-consumer carpet products recycled include carpet cushion,
automotive parts, natural turf-based roofing tiles, furniture,
pallets, filtration pipes and boards.
A number of companies - such as
Interface Inc., Atlanta; and Milliken Carpet, LaGrange, Ga. -
have reuse programs. They take back old carpet tiles, and clean
and refurbish them, even adding new color and patterns. But
reuse accounts for only a minuscule portion of carpet diverted
from landfills.
Recycling of material is much more
significant, and most carpet manufacturers now comprise
recycled content in their carpet ranges, especially in the
backing polymers. C&A takes polyvinyl chloride (PVC)-backed
carpet and recycles it into backing for new carpet. 10 million
pounds of carpet per year are recycled this way. PVC recycling
is economically viable. Currently, it is cheaper to make a tile
with recycled PVC than to use virgin material.
Manufacturers also are beginning
to consider recycling in the design of their carpets. Dalton,
Ga.-based Shaw Industry Inc.'s EcoWorx® polyethylene backing -
just one end product produced from its many recycling and
sustainability efforts - is calculated specifically for easy
recycling. The company also has a cradle-to-cradle design
protocol to assess each individual material used in its
merchandise to determine whether it is safe for the
ecosystem.
One company in Houston, is
developing railroad ties that integrate carpet materials. The
novel composite tie is made of a proprietary mixture of
plastics, rubber from recycled tires, waste materials, chemical
additives and various fillers and reinforcement agents. In
extensive field tests, they have proven to be superior to
wooden crossties, lasting up to 50 years. They also are fully
recyclable at the end of their useful life. This would
eliminate the use of creosote - a human carcinogen - as a
preservative. Old carpet also may find its way into plastic
lumber or specialty products such as drain sediment filters,
which outlast natural hay.
And surprise, research suggests
carpet is a better fuel than brown coal. Carpet is highly
efficient and perfect for refuse-derived fuel. It could be
collected with other high-calorific waste sources to fabricate
refuse-derived fuel (RDF) - waste to energy. Once the RDF
infrastructure is in place, it may then be possible to look at
sorting out materials from this waste stream for chemical or
other recycling. The RDF solution is best for those products
made 10 years ago, when nobody thought about designing carpets
for easy recycling.
So consider recycling your worn
out carpet instead of taking it to the landfill.
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