How does recycling work!?
Paper recycling is the process of recovering waste paper and remaking it into new paper products. There are three categories of paper that can be used as feedstocks for making recycled paper: mill broke, pre-consumer waste, and post-consumer waste.[1] Mill broke is paper trimmings and other paper scrap from the manufacture of paper, and is recycled internally in a paper mill. Pre-consumer waste is material that was discarded before it was ready for consumer use. Post-consumer waste is material discarded after consumer use such as old magazines, old telephone directories, and residential mixed paper.[2] Paper suitable for recycling is called “scrap paper”.
recycling is when material from a consumed finished product like a soda or newspaper are used to make new material. in case of sodas, the aluminum can used to contain the soda is melted and turned into a sheet of aluminum which is then rolled or shaped into a soda can again or into any other shape like rain water gutters for the roof of a house or slotted window frames. newspaper is mashed, with water to remove the ink, bleached and turned into new paper for printing either a new issue of a newspaper or magazine of paper for notebooks. almost everything can be recycled, if we have the desire and determination to do it. it also save the raw materials in nature, so we don’t have to destroy too much of nature for those raw materials which can be attained from the waste we create.