Downcycling can help to keep materials in use, reduce consumption of
raw materials, and avoid the energy usage,
greenhouse gas emissions,
air pollution, and
water pollution of primary production and resource extraction. s, they smash everything. What we need is
upcycling where old products are given more value not less." He despairs of the German situation and recalls the supply of a large quantity of reclaimed woodblock from an English supplier for a contract in Nuremberg while just down the road a load of similar blocks was scrapped. It was a pinky looking aggregate with pieces of handmade brick, old tiles and discernible parts of useful old items mixed with crushed
concrete. Is this the future for Europe? The term
downcycling was also used by
William McDonough and
Michael Braungart in their 2002 book
Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. As we have noted, most recycling is actually
downcycling; it reduces the
quality of a
material over time. When
plastics other than those
found in soda and water bottles are
recycled, they are mixed with different plastics to produce a hybrid of lower quality, which is then molded into something amorphous and cheap, such as a
park bench or a
speed bump...
Aluminum is another valuable but constantly downcycled material. The typical
soda can consists of two kinds of aluminum: the walls are composed of aluminum,
manganese alloy with some
magnesium, plus coatings and paint, while the harder top is aluminum
magnesium alloy. In conventional recycling these materials are melted together, resulting in a weaker—and less useful—product. == Similar operations ==