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Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

What to do with old refrigerator water filter?

The water filter that was cut.
Routinely replacing your old refrigerator water filter with a new one is of great importance to keep your drinking water cleaner and safer and the air inside your refrigerator fresh. But the replacement of a filter at least once every six months or every 200-300 gallons of water is a tremendous burden on the environment. Just image how much trash Americans add to the landfill by throwing away filters twice every year! It adds up.

Refrigerator water filters join the efforts to protect the environment by encouraging the public to drink tap water, sparing landfill that may otherwise be occupied by excessive amounts of used water bottles.

You can carry your filter’s eco-friendliness forward by recycling it, but you may have to do a little detective work first since the recycling process varies by refrigerator manufacturer and filter type.

1. Contact your refrigerator manufacturer for information on recycling programs

You can contact your refrigerator manufacturer by mail or telephone, and ask them if any recycling programs for refrigerator water filters are available. In ordinary circumstances, the manufacturer will accept filters for recycling via mail or recommend a drop-off location for a recycling program.

In 2014, Whirlpool launched the Refresh & Recycle refrigerator water filter recycling program, allowing consumers to recycle their used filters for a small cost. The program accepts refrigerator water filters from any manufacturers.

However, you can’t always count on refrigerator manufacturers to help dispose of your used filters, especially since some of them haven’t launched recycling programs yet. To address the problem, we’d like to offer the following alternative methods.

2. Consult your local recycling center

You can contact your local recycling center, and ask them about the proper ways to deal with your used refrigerator water filter. They may be able to tell you how to take apart the device and recycle its parts. Then follow their instructions and sort and recycle the parts piece by piece.

3. Place your used refrigerator water filter in recycling bins for collection 

Place your used refrigerator water filter shell in curbside recycling bins for collection after cleaning and drying it. But before it, you should contact your local recycler to find out what level of plastic they accept - many accept only #1 and #2, others accept up to #5 and higher. If your refrigerator’s manufacturer did not provide you with the information, look for the type of plastic printed on the shell - you’ll find a “1,” “2,” “3,” “4,” or “5” surrounded by three arrows that form a triangular shape.

4. Don’t dispose of your used refrigerator water filter like this:

To protect the environment, please never throw away charcoal from your used refrigerator water filter to your garden or any other lands that are not used for collecting hazardous wastes.

Refrigerator water filters are especially designed to absorb impurities and contaminants such as minerals, chemicals, and bacteria in tap water, so they are very likely to contain sediments that are harmful to your soil after working for a long period of time.

Another problem is that Mavea filters, for example, contain silver inside. While silver is great for filtering your water, it’s not great for growing plants.

Now you have nearly all the resources you need to recycle your used refrigerator water filters. Remember that everything is recyclable even if your local recycling center doesn’t accept it. The only thing that limits you is your own imagination, so get creative while you help the environment.

Interested in knowing more about or purchasing refrigerator water filters? Just visit gpfilter.com. The shopping site sells NSF International-certified and best-priced filters compatible with nearly all refrigerator brands. Most importantly, they are very environmentally-friendly, causing little harm to our surroundings. Many thanks for doing your part to save our planet!


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Amazon rainforest fires: What can we do to protect the environment?


map of Amazon Rainforest Fire
map of Amazon Rainforest Fire 

Thousands of huge fires have been ravaging the Amazon rainforest in Brazil for about three consecutive weeks, raising widespread concern about the health of the entire planet.

The northern states of Roraima, Acre, Rondônia and Amazonas are particularly badly affected, the BBC News reported.

Environmentalists and researchers said the blazes were likely lit by ranchers, farmers, and loggers who want to burn and exploit the land for economic benefits.

The Amazon rainforest produces more than 20% of the world’s oxygen and absorbs millions of tonnes of carbon emissions every year, making it vital to slowing down the pace of global warming.

The region is also home to at least 10% of the world’s biodiversity and one million indigenous people.

The raging fires have prompted a growing number of people, including world leaders and high-profile celebrities, to speak out.

“Our house is burning. Literally. The Amazon - the lungs which produce 20% of our planet’s oxygen - is on fire,” French President Emmanuel Macron tweeted, calling it an “international crisis” that needs to top the agenda at this weekend’s G7 summit.

In an Instagram post, American singer Madonna Louise Ciccone urged Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro to change his pro-business policies and help the entire planet by protecting the Amazon rainforest.

American actor Leonardo DiCaprio called on his fans to donate to front line Amazon groups.

On Twitter, many people tweeted using the hashtag #PrayforAmazonia to express their sorrow.

As of press time, extra emergency workers have been sent to the scene of the fire, and sanctuaries are being set up for animals escaping the flames, according to the BBC News.

Increasing fires

Brazil has seen a record number of forest fires in 2019, data released by the country’s space agency National Institute for Space Research (NIPE) shows.

The NIPE said its satellite data showed an 85% increase in the same period in 2018.

The official figures show more than 75,000 forest fires were recorded in Brazil in the first eight months of the year - the highest number since 2013. That compares with 40,000 in the same period in 2018.

A number of other countries in the Amazon region, including Venezuela and Bolivia,  have also seen a higher number of fires this year.

Forest fires can be caused by both natural hazards, such as lightning, and farmers and loggers clearing land for crops or grazing.

What can we do?

Forests are of great importance to the environment. Without it, climate change could become irreversible. So every one of us have the responsibility to do something to protect them. Here’s what we recommend you to do: Help reforestation and slow deforestation, make sure the products you buy are “forest safe” and take steps to live sustainably.

Refrigerator filter brand Glaical Pure has been joining the efforts to protect the environment by advocating using filters for purified water rather than buying bottled water. Compared to other brands, our filters are of better quality but cost less. If you are interested, just visit www.gpfilter.com.

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