By using one gallon of recycled paint, instead of buying a new one, 100 kilowatt-hours of energy are saved and hundreds of pounds of carbon dioxide are prevented from entering the air, according to Earth911.com, a website supported by national recycling and disposal service Quest Resource Management Group.
To help keep leftover paint to a minimum, first measure how much your project needs. One gallon of paint can cover up to 350 square feet. If you end up with extra, there are ways to safely get rid of it.
After a meal, crumbs and other uneaten bits of food are washed down the kitchen sink. In the bathroom, the grime rinsed off in the shower flows out of the tub and human waste is flushed away.
Wastewater treatment plants comfortably handle these types of contaminants, but paint is a household hazardous waste that if improperly disposed, “can pollute the environment and pose a threat to human health,” the EPA states.
“Certain types of [household hazardous wastes] have the potential to cause physical injury to sanitation workers, contaminate septic tanks or wastewater treatment systems if poured down drains or toilets,” the government agency explains.
Paints that should be sent to household hazardous waste centers include oil-based, “wood preservatives,” and mercury-containing paints.
Those products, along with spray paints, are incinerated.
Water-based paints (also known as latex paints), though, can be recycled so be sure to keep those separate from the oil-based stuff. Avoid mixing the different paint types as they are reused and disposed of in different ways.
Although latex paint is generally known as non-toxic, some products (with mildew protection) might have pesticides.
You can recycle oil-based paint at the following locations:
Click here for more details, including how-to guides, for recycling different types of household paint.
Water-based paint is recycled in two ways: reprocessing and reblending.
Reprocessing involves the separation of paint by color, filtering out solids, mixing it with new paint, and adding more pigments to create a new color. After the paint is reprocessed, the product is ready to be placed back on the market.
Reblending involves combining several paints to make a new color. Reprocessed paint is made into more colors, and reblended paint becomes neutral shades.
The City’s ambitious Tree Plan will need an all-out effort to accomplish. Here are some…
Catch up on the latest in sustainability news: Trash cleanup group starts a new video…
How one neighbor’s loss reflects a citywide dilemma. “SAVE MY TREE!” That’s what Nicole Fakhoury…
Catch up on this week’s sustainability news: Philadelphia Navy Yard is now the largest LEED…
For some survivors, hiking and gardens offer deeper healing than pharmaceuticals. This story is the…
Councilmember Jamie Gauthier is Green Philly’s latest Civic Catalyst. Read how Gauthier uses her role…