Reduce. "Reduce" means using fewer resources in the first place. This is the most effective of the three R's and the place to begin.
Reuse. Before you recycle or dispose of anything, consider whether it has life left in it. A jam jar can store leftovers. Food scraps can become compost. An old shirt can become a pajama top. An opened envelope can become a shopping list. A magazine can be shared. DVDs can be traded. A dishwasher can be repaired. A computer can be upgraded. A car can be resold. A cell phone can be donated. Returnable bottles can be, well... returned.
Recycle. Recycling is the "R" that has caught on the best. Partly, this is because there are so many curbside recycling programs today (8,660 as of 2006, according to the EPA), which makes recycling so darned easy. What keeps it from being a total piece of cake is the rules. Every municipality has its own, and they are not always as straightforward as they could be.
The terms "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle" are the 3 Rs of the Waste hierarchy The waste hierarchy refers to the 3 Rs of waste-minimisation which classify strategies according to their desirability. The 3 Rs are meant to be a hierarchy, in order of importance.
reduce reuse recycle
reduce , reuse and recycle
Reduce, Reuse and Recylce
Reduce, Re-use, Recycle Reduce means use fewer materials. Re-use means to fix things and use them again, rather than throwing them away. Recycle means to make the materials into new items once the original can't be used anymore.
"The 3 Rs" are most commonly referred to as "readin', writin', and 'rithmatic".
Reduce,Reuse and Recycle are the 3-R principle in solid waste management.
rethink,refuse, reduce,reuse recycle,regulate and research
why reuse, reduce, recycle are listed in that order
Rethink, Reuse, Recycle, Repair, Reduce, Refuse.
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
The 3 R's of resource management are reduce, reuse, and recycle. This approach aims to minimize waste and conserve resources by reducing consumption, reusing items where possible, and recycling materials to extend their lifecycle.