The recycling of metals is the melting down of scrap metal, and reusing the melted metal to make something new, for example, taking an old car chassis, melting it down, then using the metal to cast a new chassis.
Metal recycling is the process of turning old, used and perceived useless metal into a new material. This process is encouraged by pay people for their scrap.
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if we are talking about India and we are calculating the recycling of metals by large companies like hindalco, SAIL, tatasteel, sterlite, jsw etc as well as other mid cap and small cap companies the per day recycling of metals in there company is near by 2 to 3 million tonnes per day.
We put glass in the barrel for recycling at school.
· Primary recycling is taking the recycled material and putting it back into the same product; · secondary recycling is using the material in some other end product · tertiary recycling requires breaking the material down into its original components.
recycling is reusing and it conserves energy by not putting it into a dump..
By recycling, you do not have to use the energy to use new resources to produce bottles and such
British Metals Recycling Association was created in 2001.
There are plenty of gains of recycling metals like: It conserves natural resources It saves energy
Recycling metals prevents them from piling up in landfills. If not recycled, metals can last for millennia, as evidenced by metal tools found at archaeological sites.
Recycling of mobile phones is just like recycling any other recyclable wastes. It is important because the mobile phone contains a lot of metals, plastics and other materials (flame retardants, ceramics) which the planet desperately needs us to recycle.
pretty much every recycling centre :)
ya get small dik
Yes, in one of the first steps in the recycling process various things, such as metals, are removed. These metals are then sent to another recycling plant where they can individually be recycled. So it does need to be removed before they pick up your recycling bin.
The Magnets are often used for the separation of metals in many of todays most common recycling applications such as automobile recycling, recycling of electrical goods, skip waste, domestic waste and in fact, wherever there is a need to separate ferrous and non-ferrous metals from other materials.
Metals can be melted down repeatedly without losing their strength or durability, which makes them ideal for recycling.
waste and recycling
All you da
There are certain things that can only be put together when recycling. ( for example you can't mix plastics and metals.)