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Aluminum and Tin Cans are Resources

7,558 tons were disposed of at the landfill in 2008

 
King County Waste Stream Graph

KC Waste Stream

What's in your garbage?

Eighty percent of materials thrown away are resources – not waste.

What are they?

Aluminum and tin are non-ferrous metals which means they do not contain iron. Among other things, they are used to make many types of food and beverage cans. These cans are easy and inexpensive to recycle.

Why recycle cans?

Cans in the landfill are a wasted resource. Recycling metal requires significantly fewer resources than virgin metal extraction. It is much less environmentally damaging and less expensive than mining, concentrating and smelting the raw materials.

Recycling just one aluminum can saves enough energy to power a television for three hours. Over 173 million aluminum cans were disposed of at the landfill in King County in 2008. The energy that could have been saved by recycling those cans could power a television for 59,528 years!

What can you do?


  • If you are not signed up for curbside garbage collection, consider doing so. In most cases, recycling service is included in your bill.
  • If you self-haul, separate aluminum and tin and drop it off at the free recycling section of the transfer station.
  • Use the What do I do with…? Web site to locate a private drop box.
  • Appliances can be recycled at a number of locations for a fee. Use the What do I do with? Web site to find a location nearest you
  • King County and many cities have recycling collection events that take scrap metal and appliances.

Related Information

  • What happens to my recyclables? Materials collected for recycling in King County become new products, many of them manufactured locally. This 10-minute video shows how the recycling loop works: from collection to remanufacture to new product.
  • Recycle More. It's Easy To Do. Although most King County residents say they participate in their curbside recycling program, more than half of what ends up in the Cedar Hills Regional Landfill is readily recyclable.
  • Recycle Food. It's Easy To Do. Food scraps and food soiled paper break down into compost, a soil amendment that enriches soil and improves plant health.
  • King County’s Zero Waste program is a guiding principle for all waste reduction and recycling programs.

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Updated: Oct. 8, 2009


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