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by chrischen 2143 days ago
> like not dumping it in the woods if it can't be sold.

I'd imagine that's not as big of a problem as it may sound since the criminals wouldn't want to lose money like that.

That being said if the criminals are getting to the recycling first they're technically providing better (faster) service.

1 comments

Like any other industry, I assume the value of these things ebbs and flows. If you look at recycling in the US when China decided not to accept our waste, I bet a lot of companies found themselves stuck with tons of material that suddenly had negative value. It's easier to imagine a government agency doing the right thing in that situation than a criminal enterprise.
That's an isolated incident. I don't think the cardboard they've been collecting all this time regularly will have day to day shifts in values that cause them to randomly discard some in the forest.
A lot of cardboard has no recycling value because it is contaminated with other materials.

For example, used pizza boxes soaked with grease are not recyclable. If you're lucky and your city has a municipal composting program, they can be composted, or some places incinerate stuff like this for energy, but otherwise they end up in the trash, or worse, discarded in the forest.

That doesn't stop people from throwing them in the recycling bin though.