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Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2023 12:24 am
by Ben Zonia
Some say that all the Amazon delivery boxes laid end to end would stretch to Pluto and back.

Recycling centers are finding as much as 50% of recycled materials by weight are Amazon boxes.

Is Amazon recycling their own boxes anywhere?

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2023 1:46 am
by Deleted User 9015
My dogs used to recycle. I got a powder to help with that.

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Wed Nov 22, 2023 6:22 am
by Round Six
I'm curious how materials being turned in to be recycled is a crisis. Seems the more boxes being recycled would mean Bezos isn't whacking down as many trees. Which is good for the environment.

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2023 12:47 am
by Chrocket87
I just use them as bonfire fodder.

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2023 8:46 am
by craig11152
I wonder what the carbon emission equation is for one Amazon truck delivering boxes all day verses a car for every box driving around to procure the content of that box at a local brick and mortar

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2023 9:20 am
by Round Six
craig11152 wrote:
Thu Nov 23, 2023 8:46 am
I wonder what the carbon emission equation is for one Amazon truck delivering boxes all day verses a car for every box driving around to procure the content of that box at a local brick and mortar
I'm thinking the truck emits fewer emissions per item. Far less than driving to six stores (true story) trying to find something I could of ordered online in my pj's.

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2023 10:06 am
by TC Talks
Round Six wrote:
Thu Nov 23, 2023 9:20 am
craig11152 wrote:
Thu Nov 23, 2023 8:46 am
I wonder what the carbon emission equation is for one Amazon truck delivering boxes all day verses a car for every box driving around to procure the content of that box at a local brick and mortar
I'm thinking the truck emits fewer emissions per item. Far less than driving to six stores (true story) trying to find something I could of ordered online in my pj's.
My week involves trips to the post office, Aldi, The Co-op, the airport and restaurants.

I get a box or two from Amazon. If you order weekly, it's less boxes. In larger cities, they are now experimenting with reusable packaging that the amazon driver picks up on the next delivery. That's the kind of thing that will save money and reduce cardboard.

Re: Used Amazon Boxes Creating Recycling Crisis

Posted: Thu Nov 23, 2023 2:41 pm
by Rate This
craig11152 wrote:
Thu Nov 23, 2023 8:46 am
I wonder what the carbon emission equation is for one Amazon truck delivering boxes all day verses a car for every box driving around to procure the content of that box at a local brick and mortar
I would suppose the more you can haul at a time = efficiency = the better environmental result. If that was 200 cars getting each box on that truck somewhere the pollution level would be far higher especially with the deployment of their electric fleet. Even the emissions to make the electricity to power the truck are likely far less.