Dr. Cadmium wrote:
If metal prices go much higher, we'll all be dealing in glass, plastic, cardboard and rags before long...
hobo finds wrote:New Recycling place by me now is buying glass bottles @ .05 lb. AZ is not a deposit state. I will give it a try and see! Less that I am giving to the city in there recycling bins!
Dr. Cadmium wrote:I'll sell you my grass clippings and dead leaves for $20/gross ton.
cwgii wrote:hobo finds wrote:New Recycling place by me now is buying glass bottles @ .05 lb. AZ is not a deposit state. I will give it a try and see! Less that I am giving to the city in there recycling bins!
here in tucson too........ i turned in 650 pounds yesterday.
Thogey wrote:Now that's cool. .05 for glass! Awesome
That would be easy and add up quick.
The city of prescott ended their glass program. Now you have to pay to dump bottles and jars.
simplicitycounts wrote:Here in my town they crush them and bring them out to the demolition landfill in one HUGE pile. There are no buyers in our area. They say it is cheaper to make new glass out of sand, then to try to reprocess old stuff. I wonder how they can afford to pay the nickel a pound?
simplicitycounts wrote:Here in my town they crush them and bring them out to the demolition landfill in one HUGE pile. There are no buyers in our area. They say it is cheaper to make new glass out of sand, then to try to reprocess old stuff. I wonder how they can afford to pay the nickel a pound?
simplicitycounts wrote:Here in my town they crush them and bring them out to the demolition landfill in one HUGE pile. There are no buyers in our area. They say it is cheaper to make new glass out of sand, then to try to reprocess old stuff. I wonder how they can afford to pay the nickel a pound?
texcollex wrote:simplicitycounts wrote:Here in my town they crush them and bring them out to the demolition landfill in one HUGE pile. There are no buyers in our area. They say it is cheaper to make new glass out of sand, then to try to reprocess old stuff. I wonder how they can afford to pay the nickel a pound?
From what I was told it saves a large amount of energy to mix in used glass with the new. They crush it and mix it in at a certain point in the process. Maybe it is the distance to haul it that makes it less profitable.
cwgii wrote:since normas is back to buying glass, i will take it there. .03 is kind of the break point of not being worth it.
rodeocowboy72 wrote:hello there when did norma open back up and do you have a phone number for them
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