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- 5 innovative ways your coffee grounds can be recycled
Coffee waste is a useful resource that could be upcycled for all sorts of purposes - from biofuel to fertilizer
- Circular water solutions key to sustainable data centres
Digital connectivity shapes our daily lives, with the demand for vast data centres to process information reaching unprecedented levels However, data centre operations come with an environmental cost, particularly regarding materials, energy and water usage Integrating circular water management principles can help ensure data centres can support future technological advancements
- How recycled material could make fashion more sustainable
Fast fashion has low prices but a high environmental cost, so tech enabling material to be recycled will be key in making the industry more sustainable
- 4 charts to show why adopting a circular economy matters
A circular economy that reduces, reuses or recycles waste can cut the world’s growing municipal waste volumes, finds a new United Nations report Here’s how
- 5 unusual waste products recycled into something new | World Economic Forum
From tennis balls to coffee grounds, these companies are finding novel ways to recycle and reuse our waste
- 8 inspiring innovations that are helping to fight plastic pollution
Plastic pollution continues to threaten our planet's well-being These innovators from around the world are working towards reducing plastic waste
- Why is black plastic packaging so hard to recycle?
Black plastic is recyclable, but waste sorting systems can’t recognize black pigments Even if black plastic is separated, it often ends up in landfill Major UK supermarkets have pledged to stop using black plastic for their own product ranges
- Helping companies in China recycle 50% of e-waste by 2025
What’s the challenge? We recycle just 20% of the more than 53 million metric tonnes of e-waste generated globally each year, according to the Global E-waste Monitor This is a challenge and a missed opportunity Experts estimate that materials in global e-waste are worth $62 billion per year That value currently sits untapped in landfills
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