usually old plastics are dirty there is a lot of bacterias that are left in the plastic. by recycling the plastic, the recyclers can clean those plastic, by melting it and make a new plastic again and they reuse it back.
Specifics would be nice, as anything can be considered a resource, however, in northern Canada through Alaska the fossil fuel deposits are quite abundant.
atlas
yes
A temperate marine climate would have to be our #1 resource.
To my knowledge plastic surgery is still very expensive. However, there could be a slight decrease because plastic surgery has been hit by the media on several occasions and the first fight was over breast implants. I watched a program on all the terrible botched jobs on breasts and faces on mainly women that so-called plastic surgeons were allowed to get away with. Fortunately these women had the courage to come forward. I would think the media attention would smarten the public up where they would do their homework before retaining a plastic surgeon.
Oil, the fossil fuel, is a non-renewable resource on human time scales. Vegetable oil is a renewable resource. An inexhaustible resource would be sunlight and a renewable resource would be wind energy and solar energy.
I think hotdogs would be considered a renewable source because they come from unused pig entrails, and pigs are renewable on pig farms.
A true renewable resource MUST be inexhaustible. They would self renew.
In real terms nothing is inexhaustible, though in practical terms they may be considered so.Trees considered this way fit into either category, though most would say they are a renewable resource.
Yes, blinds made from bamboo are considered "green:, they are a renewable resource that is great for the environment.
Yes, it would be considered so because, unlike coal or oil, you do not use it up.
Pearls are constantly being formed. They would be a renewable resource as they can be grown.
grass is a renewable resource because when it is dead, it will grow again and again Well... dormant would be more accurate. Otherwise, I agree it is renewable.
Oranges are a fruit that is grown, and are renewable. I don't know if I would call fruit a resource, though.
In order for geothermal steam to be considered a renewable resource, the rate of extraction must not exceed the rate of natural replenishment. This would require careful monitoring of the geothermal reservoir to ensure sustainable use. Additionally, the environmental impacts of geothermal energy extraction would need to be minimized to maintain its renewable status.
Technically speaking, it would be a renewable resource, since salmon can lay eggs, or have fry. The only thing that would make them a non renewable resource would be if they were killed off to quick for them to reproduce.
An example of a non-renewable resource is coal, because when you burn it it is finished. A non-example of a non-renewable resource is solar power, because you can use it (to generate electricity) and it is still there to be used again.