PLACE YOUR unUSED steel IN YOUR BLUE BAGS FOR MUNCIE SANITARY DISTRICT TO PICK UP OR TAKE IT TO EAST CENTRAL RECYCLING AT 701 E. CENTENNIAL AVE.
- Every day, Americans use enough steel and tin cans to make a steel pipe running from Los Angeles to New York and back.
- 37 billion steel cans weighing 2,654,892 tons were used in the U.S. in 1991.
- 97% of all steel cans are used for food.
- The average American uses 142 steel cans per year.
- About 11.5 million tons of ferrous (e.g., steel and iron) waste was generated in the U.S. in 1994.
- Americans throw away enough iron and steel to continuously supply the nation’s automakers.
- Ferrous metals constituted 5.5% of the 1994 U.S. municipal solid waste stream by weight.
- In 1994, approximately 53.1% of all steel cans and 27.8% of steel packaging materials, such as strapping, were recycled. The overall rate of ferrous metal recovery was about 25.2%.
- Steel food and beverage cans are recycled into a variety of products including new cans, bicycle frames, and even new cars.
Content on this page provided by Second Time Around – EPA Region 5 and Agricultural & Biological Engineering, Purdue University.