Being ecologically responsible is our duty to the environment
When you’re looking out over your gorgeous yard, whether it’s natural or synthetic. You wish to think you’re being ecologically responsible, ideally? When it comes to selecting a yard, there are advantages and disadvantages to both natural and synthetic grass.
Sure, synthetic grass is artificial. However bear in mind that even “natural” yard is neither natural nor native. It’s normally trucked in and requires ongoing feeding, watering and reseeding to help maintain it.
Yes, synthetic grass diverts countless tires from land fills each year, recycling them into crumb rubber pellets utilized for infill. On the other hand, it requires an energy-intensive manufacturing process, as do most manufactured consumer products.
You can save money while going green!
Artificial turf requires less water and upkeep, which reduces the amount of nonrenewable fuel sources used to produce and lawn care items (chemicals, fertilizers, pesticides, gas-powered lawn mowers, and so on). However natural turf offers a rather cooler surface and, in particular conditions, even has a cooling effect on the surrounding location.
Yard clippings comprise almost half of numerous communities landfill contents. Particularly throughout the growing season. Artificial yards do not have to be trimmed. So they don’t produce clippings that require transport to landfills(no wasted gas from trucks driving around). But at the end of its lifecycle, typically a minimum of 7-10 years. Artificial turf needs to be disposed of.
Uh-oh, that muddies the waters on the land fill issue. While the plastic from artificial turf has actually always been recyclable, it was difficult to separate the carpet(turf) from the sand and rubber infill, making recycling inefficient and incomplete. Disposal issues greatly increased synthetic grass’s overall carbon footprint.
Companies in the industry are doing their part to go green, so should we.
The market has now taken a big step in the right direction. According to an August 2013 post in Plastics News. Two companies have collaborated not just to get rid of the disposal issue. But also to recycle the resulting material into a variety of extruded plastic items, consisting of infill to be utilized in new grass setups.
This process is called full-field recycling. The new recycling process “allows us to draw out all that sand and rubber from the carpet” says one of the partnering CEOs. “So now we’re back to having a clean plastic carpet that we can then put through the process to get to a final product.”
These innovative companies are not just decreasing the ecological impact of synthetic grass, oftentimes they are also making recycling more economical– and for that reason more attractive– for the customer.
There will constantly be advantages and disadvantages in any choice. However the turf market is striving to tip the scales toward environmental obligation.
Contact Atlanta Artificial Grass today and start being ecologically responsible!