What Is Zero Waste?
From the Grassroots Recycling Network, www.grrn.org
Zero Waste is a philosophy and a design principle for the 21st
Century. It includes 'recycling' but goes beyond recycling by
taking a 'whole system' approach to the vast flow of resources
and waste through human society.
Zero Waste maximizes recycling, minimizes waste, reduces consumption
and ensures that products are made to be reused, repaired or
recycled back into nature or the marketplace.
Zero Waste:
* redesigns the current, one-way industrial system into a circular
system modeled on Nature's successful strategies
* challenges badly designed business systems that "use
too many resources to make too few people more productive"
* addresses, through job creation and civic participation, increasing
wastage of human resources and erosion of democracy
* helps communities achieve a local economy that operates efficiently,
sustains good jobs, and provides a measure of self-sufficiency.
* aims to eliminate rather than manage waste
Zero Waste makes recycling a powerful entry point into a critique
of excessive consumption, waste, corporate irresponsibility,
and the fundamental causes of environmental destruction.
"Zero Waste poses a fundamental challenge to 'business
as usual.'
It has the potential to motivate people to
change their life styles, demand new products, and insist that
corporations and governments behave in new ways. This is a very
exciting development."
-- Peter Montague, editor of Rachel's Environment & Health
Weekly
"Zero Waste is the mother of environmental no-brainers."