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Recycle Utah

Recycle Utah

Nonprofit Summit County, Utah Recycling Center

  • About
    • Our Impact
    • Our Team
    • Job Opportunities
    • Financial Statements
  • Services
    • Materials Accepted
    • Remote Glass Recycling Bins
    • Thrift Store
    • Rain Barrels
    • Moving Materials for Sale
    • Self Serve Paper Shredder
    • Recycling Bin Rentals
    • CSA Pick Up
    • Community Trash Cleanups
    • Composting
    • Curbside Recycling
    • Household Hazardous Waste
      • Medicine Disposal
  • Education
    • Elementary & Adult Education
    • Green Business Program
    • Latinx Outreach
    • Blog
  • Support
    • Donate Now
    • Support Recycle Utah’s Plans for the Future
    • Sponsor a Bin
    • Volunteer
    • Shop and Donate
    • Donate Your Car
    • 2024 Supporters
  • Events

#greentips

Sustainable Ski Gear 

February 12, 2025 by director@recycleutah.org

Sustainable Ski Gear When we think about skiing or snowboarding, we often picture fun trips with friends or locals hitting the slopes regularly. However, many people overlook the environmental impact of ski and snowboard gear. For example, jackets and pants are often made with “forever chemicals”, also known as per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). These chemicals don’t break down easily and can persist in the environment and human bodies for decades, contaminating water, soil, air, and living organisms.

Although the ski and snowboard industry has taken steps toward eco-friendliness, navigating these options can sometimes be confusing. So, what can you do to help?

Start by supporting eco-conscious brands. Arc’teryx has made significant strides in sustainability, using more sustainable fabrics like “bluesign® certified” materials, which reduce harmful chemicals during production. Brands like K2, Salomon, and Lib Tech are also moving toward greener options.

K2 uses eco-friendly resins in many of its skis and snowboards, reducing the environmental impact compared to traditional petroleum-based resins. Salomon is minimizing waste by switching to 100% recycled paper and cardboard for packaging, reducing their footprint in shipping and retail processes.

Lib Tech is another leader in sustainability, known for using FSC-certified wood in their snowboard and ski cores. This ensures the wood is responsibly sourced without contributing to deforestation.

These brands, along with others, are actively working to reduce their environmental impact. By choosing gear from these eco-conscious companies, you can help support more sustainable practices in the winter sports industry. It’s important to do your research and support brands that prioritize sustainability!

By Uliana Moshina

Filed Under: Sustainable Materials Tagged With: #energy efficiency, #greentips, #recycle utah, #recycling, #sustainability, #zero waste, #zerowaste

Every Drop Counts: Simple Water Conservation Tips to Protect Our Future

February 5, 2025 by director@recycleutah.org

With a strong current emphasis on composting, recycling, and waste, it can be easy to overlook the simple habits of water conservation that are just as vital. Water is the miracle solution that makes life possible on Earth. If we fail to save our water, it won’t be long before ecosystems will collapse and humanity will face dire consequences. Many of the current environmental dilemmas are associated with the failure to conserve water, specifically freshwater. Without clean water, agriculture would struggle, therefore hurting our economy and the livelihoods of farming communities; without clean water, there would be inadequate sanitation and higher vulnerability to diseases; without clean water, lakes, rivers, and reservoirs would dry up and deplete groundwater as well as impact water-dependent ecosystems, eliminating the biodiversity that ultimately sustains humankind. 

Here in Park City, we rely on water for our economy and recreational activities. Without clean water, we could not ski, swim, golf, boat, or raft down rivers. Without clean water, everything from individual lives to economies to the environment would be in distress.

If all individuals were to adopt conservation water practices, the compounded effort would have a positive effect on our environment. Here are some tips to conserve:

  • Turn off the faucet/shower when not using it (e.g. washing in the shower or brushing your teeth).
  • Take shorter showers! A 10-minute shower uses about 25 gallons of water.
  • Never pour water down the drain; instead, find another use for it, like watering plants or refilling water bowls for pets.
  • Repair leaks and drippage. 
  • Be laundry-aware (e.g. minimize the number of loads and fill them up)
  • Take showers instead of baths. 
  • “If it’s yellow let it mellow, if it’s brown, flush it down.” 

More communities are starting to implement conservation practices: Californians after some extreme droughts and Capetown, South Africa after battling their 2017 drought. We should be no different, even when water is plentiful. It’s important to remember that our water does not belong to us; it is a resource we share with every other living thing and must be treated as such.

By Grayson Rae

Filed Under: Thriving Community & Equity Tagged With: #greentips, #recycle utah, #sustainability, #zero waste, #zerowaste

The Footprint of Fashion

January 22, 2025 by director@recycleutah.org

Pollution from air, landfills, or water is often visible to our eye, but what about textiles? Clothing, jackets, bedding, and even shoes can carry a hefty carbon and water footprint behind the scenes. Europe and the United States are the biggest culprits for clothing waste. Cotton is water-intensive and insecticide-heavy; leather is often associated with Chromium, a carcinogen; and synthetics like polyester, nylon, and rayon are made from fossil fuels. My friend recently neglected to wash a shirt he purchased at a chain store and consequently broke out in a rash on his chest and back!

Additionally, the clothing may travel thousands of miles before arriving at our doorstep because of our complicated supply chain structure. Lastly, microplastics and dyes may seep
into our water system in the wash.

If you’re tired of a shirt or jacket after three days or three years, where should you take it? 85%
of U.S. textile waste ends up in landfills or incinerators, and petroleum-based products can take decades to break down.

So you ask, how do I best buy and do away with clothes?

  1. Stop buying so much! It’s estimated that consumers now buy 60% more garments than
    in the past, and keep them for just half the time.
  2. Shop at and donate to thrift and/or consignment stores.
  3. Reduce online purchases – buy local if possible!
  4. Rent clothing. There are plenty of options for renting clothes online!
  5. Donate to Big Brothers Bins around town. They accept any textile, including old
    towels/sheets/accessories, and will either resell, donate, or repurpose textiles.
  6. Know your manufacturer. Some are more proactive than others with sustainability.
    Check out remake.world/2022-remake-fashion-accountability-report.
    Clothing is fun! It’s how we express ourselves. Perhaps 2025 can be a year of conscious styling with your clothing, shoes, accessories, housewares, and more. Everything we own has an environmental footprint.

By Mary Closser

Filed Under: Sustainable Materials Tagged With: #greentips, #recycle utah, #recycling, #sustainability, #zero waste, #zerowaste

Sustainable Countertop Cooking

January 15, 2025 by director@recycleutah.org

Considering the environmental impact of your daily habits and the potential for utility savings, you may find it worthwhile to adopt more energy-efficient cooking methods. Using appliances like air fryers, toaster ovens, and crockpots instead of a traditional stove or oven can make a big difference.

Cooking with an air fryer, toaster oven, and crockpot can maximize sustainable home cooking.
All of these countertop appliances require significantly less electricity than an electric stove, and they enable you to cook without using your gas stove. Look for models with energy star ratings for the greatest energy conservation.

Because of its small cooking chamber and super-convection, an air fryer cooks food much
faster than a traditional oven – often in about half the time. Air fryers heat up much faster than
full-size ovens. Food cooked in air fryers becomes crispy and flavorful with little or no added oil, promoting healthy cooking. Roast vegetables, cook meat and fish, make french fries and veggie chips, and crisp up leftovers in your air fryer.

Both an air fryer and toaster oven allow for precision cooking and temperature control, so it’s
easy to avoid overcooking food and unnecessary food waste. Their smaller cooking capacity
encourages portion control and minimizes preparing and wasting excessive amounts of food.
When reheating food, using an air fryer or toaster oven is much more energy efficient than
heating up a large oven. Use a toaster oven to cook a few baked potatoes, small portions of
pastries, and quickly broil vegetables and fish.

A crockpot is an excellent choice for preparing large batches of food in advance, reducing the
need for multiple cooking sessions and saving energy in the process. Because it is designed to
operate cheaply at low temperatures for an extended period of time, using an unattended
crockpot per manufacturer instructions is generally considered safe. Braise tough cuts of meat, and cook stews, soup, and beans in a large crockpot.

By Bev Harrison

Filed Under: Sustainable Materials Tagged With: #energy efficiency, #greentips, #recycle utah, #recycling, #sustainability, #zero waste, #zerowaste

Green Banking

January 8, 2025 by director@recycleutah.org

As the saying goes, “Money makes the world go ‘round.” And if you’re looking for a simple New Year’s resolution with outsized impact – take a look at your money.

Even if you can’t afford an EV or don’t want to put solar panels on your roof, switching your
bank is something anyone can do. Where we bank and invest our money matters – and there
are a growing number of options that offer “climate-positive” banking.

For example, Atmos Bank offers checking and savings accounts (and now, solar loans) with
100% of your money funding clean energy, electrification, and other climate-positive products. In addition to mobile banking, free ATM withdrawals, a good savings rate, and up to 5% cash back when you buy from climate-friendly companies, you get an impact report – $5,000 will save 5.85 tons of CO2 a year, the equivalent of not driving 13,169 miles.

Local credit unions are also a great option, in addition to more than 30 banks featured by “Bank For Good,” and Carbon Collective for your 401K. But if you bank with one of the big banks, your money is funding the fossil fuel industry. The biggest 60 banks in the world have invested $4.6 trillion in the fossil fuel industry since 2015. As climate activist Bill McKibben says, for any American with more than $125,000 in the mainstream banking system, it’s likely producing more carbon in a year than all the actions of their daily life.

Join the Cool Down’s weekly newsletter for the latest stories, coolest hacks, and best products
that help you save money, time, and the planet.

By Anna Robertson, The Cool Down

Filed Under: Thriving Community & Equity Tagged With: #greentips, #recycle utah, #recycling, #sustainability, #zero waste, #zerowaste

Towards a Greener Future: Recycle Utah’s Vision for Our Community

January 1, 2025 by director@recycleutah.org

Over the past few years, Recycle Utah and its local partners have been discussing how to
improve waste management in Summit County and Park City. These discussions culminated in RU hiring a consulting team from RRS (Resource Recycling Systems) to analyze current wast
management practices and provide recommendations for the future. Recycle Utah diverts nearly 4 million pounds of material from landfills each year. However, our community as a whole is struggling to keep up with effective waste diversion, putting increasing pressure on our landfill and the environment.

Our landfill is filling up faster than it should. Limited space means that once it reaches capacity, there’s no option to expand—it simply closes. Extending the life of our landfill requires us to divert more of the materials we’re discarding. Shockingly, 40% of what currently ends up in the landfill could be easily diverted. Compostable waste, curbside recyclables, and even cardboard—accounting for 10% of the landfill’s volume—are materials that we can and should keep out of the landfill.

The stakes are high. With a growing community and the 2034 Olympics on the horizon, waste
management will only become more critical. Beyond the immediate strain on our landfill, 55% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from the materials process—extraction, production, and disposal. By improving our diversion practices, we’re not only preserving landfill space but also making a significant impact on our community’s carbon footprint.
RRS has conducted a thorough analysis of our local waste system, and Recycle Utah is ready
to present a proposal to address these challenges head-on. This proposal, designed to improve diversion rates and reduce landfill strain, will be shared with the community in our presentations next week. We will be calling on the community for support, as solving this issue will require collective action and commitment from us all.

Join us for our community presentations, where we will dive into the waste challenges we face and our proposed solutions. We will hold one presentation at Santy Auditorium at 6 pm on January 7th, where we will be joined by our friends at RRS. We will hold another presentation in the Richins Building Auditorium in Kimball Junction at 6 pm on January 9th.

Join us in shaping a more sustainable future for Summit County and Park City by showing your support. Let’s take action now to protect the environment for generations to come!

By Chelsea Hafer

Filed Under: Sustainable Materials Tagged With: #greentips, #recycle utah, #recycling, #sustainability, #zero waste, #zerowaste

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Copyright © 2025

  • About
    ▼
    • Our Impact
    • Our Team
    • Job Opportunities
    • Financial Statements
  • Services
    ▼
    • Materials Accepted
    • Remote Glass Recycling Bins
    • Thrift Store
    • Rain Barrels
    • Moving Materials for Sale
    • Self Serve Paper Shredder
    • Recycling Bin Rentals
    • CSA Pick Up
    • Community Trash Cleanups
    • Composting
    • Curbside Recycling
    • Household Hazardous Waste
      ▼
      • Medicine Disposal
  • Education
    ▼
    • Elementary & Adult Education
    • Green Business Program
    • Latinx Outreach
    • Blog
  • Support
    ▼
    • Donate Now
    • Support Recycle Utah’s Plans for the Future
    • Sponsor a Bin
    • Volunteer
    • Shop and Donate
    • Donate Your Car
    • 2024 Supporters
  • Events