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Additional Information

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Environmental Benefits
The construction and demolition
(C&D) industry generates and disposes almost 65 million tons of
waste annually, much of which is reusable or recyclable. Our projects
have shown deconstruction can recover up to 24 million tons of
C&D waste each year for reuse, and another 6 million tons for
recycling. By reducing waste generation, deconstruction also reduces
climate gas emissions, and abates the need for new landfills and
incinerators. Perhaps most importantly, it helps to steer the
C&D industry away from traditional consumption and disposal patterns
and towards sustainability and reuse. Reducing the industry's
consumption of virgin materials helps preserve natural resources
and protect the environment from the air, ground, and water pollution
related to extraction, processing, and disposal of raw materials.
Government and military officials,
low-income families, and environmentalists are increasingly advocating
deconstruction as a way to generate substantial benefits for their
communities. Deconstruction helps reduce waste generation, but
communities and low-income families can reap the benefits of deconstruction.
Deconstruction helps reduce waste generation, and therefore reduces
the amount of waste disposed in landfills and incinerators. This
reduces climate gas emissions, but also has a direct impact at
the local level. As you know, disposal facilities traditionally
are sited in low-income and minority areas, subjecting citizens
to a host of environmental plagues -- from airborne toxins produced
through incineration, to groundwater pollution from improper disposal
of contaminated materials. By reducing waste generation and disposal,
pollution in low-income and minority areas also is reduced.
In addition, deconstruction provides
a supply of durable, low-cost materials for reuse in construction
and renovation projects. Reducing the need for virgin materials
abates the pollution related to extraction and processing -such
as cyanide leaching from hardrock mining sites, much of which
is done on Native American lands and has been linked to substantial
groundwater pollution. It also reduces the need to manufacture
new materials, such as polyvinyl chloride (PVC, or vinyl) a common
construction material, the manufacture of which releases airborne
dioxins into (predominately minority) neighborhoods surrounding
the PVC plants.
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