Does cardboard made from trees need to be separated from cardboard made from bamboo to be recycled?
Note: Once that is answered I wouldn’t mind at all if this thread addressed anything and everything good, bad and ugly about recycling stuff.
Does cardboard made from trees need to be separated from cardboard made from bamboo to be recycled?
Note: Once that is answered I wouldn’t mind at all if this thread addressed anything and everything good, bad and ugly about recycling stuff.
Bamboo cardboard is pretty much as recyclable as cardboard made from trees. In the end, it is another cellulose fiber material.
Bamboo is an excellent growing source of material for both disposable and long term products. It grows very fast and contributes well to the carbon cycle. The materials compost well. It is very much an outstanding renewable resource.
Uses where trees are normally used are great but one caveat, the bamboo fibers clothing is kind of bullshit. That is not environmentally friendly at all. It takes a lot chemicals and processing to make this type of fabric. I’m not sure it is better than synthetic fabrics in the end.
But can the two be blended together during the recycling process? Are there cardboard boxes out there that are part wood and part grass (bamboo)?
Probably, but how much bamboo cardboard is in the system at this point?
I’ve mainly seen it for food packaging and beverage cups, not something like a corrugated box. From what I’ve read though, as these products move into the waste stream, clean cardboard and paperboard can mix in with other paper products without issue.
Every box I see (I’m in retail) containing merchandise from China is made of bamboo.
In the end, cellulose fibers are pretty much cellulose fibers. There shouldn’t be any issues mixing cardboards.