“FURNITURE
TODAY” reports that the International Sleep Products Assn. (ISPA) will
propose a federal mattress recycling law to address the growing problem of
mattress disposal in landfills. Green
Living Tips tells us that “…between 20 and 40 million mattresses are
disposed of in the USA alone each year, most ending up in landfill.” The big
problem is that the things don’t compress like regular garbage. One answer the
problem is recycling, however the ISPA shows only 25
recycling centers exist in the U.S.. There are two in Oregon, one in Eugene and
one in Tualatin. Arizona’s
recycling center says that 3,000,000 cubic feet of
landfill could be saved, if they recycled only 10% of the total mattresses
replaced in Arizona every year.
Right now, when you buy a new
mattress, your old mattress is hauled away.
One major mattress retailer said that 15% of used mattresses can be
donated but the other 85% are recycled. Green Living adds, “The average queen size
mattress weighs about 60 pounds. It contains about six pounds of
Polyurethane foam, which can be sent for reuse, chemical recycling, or can be
incinerated for energy recovery. The used foam can be turned into carpet
underlay or insulation. The wooden frames can be chipped and used as fuel, and
the cotton can be used in industrial machinery oil filters and other textile
applications. The springs, made from steel, have a high market value as
scrap but are difficult to compress.”
The
ISPA is considering “…a fee for mattress recovery collected on a mattress sold
at retail and remitted to the Mattress Recycling Council (MRC).” The new
non-profit, volunteer-led group that would represent the needs of
manufacturers, retailers, and consumers with the government charged with
setting up a mattress-recycling program.
The
other problem of old mattresses is their danger to health. One retailer told me that a used mattress
can weigh up to ten times more than when it was new, because of dust mites,
bacteria and bed bugs.
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