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News
Tis' the Season to Recycle Corrugated Boxes
December 7, 2007
Lake Forest, IL -- Holiday shoppers, Santa's helpers, moms and
dads, good little girls and boys everywhere will find themselves
surrounded by the remnants of an unwrapping extravaganza this
December 25th, as in all the years before. Packaging Corporation
of America (PCA) is hoping that in the aftermath of all that merriment,
when stuffing the gift wrap into bags and toting empty boxes out
to the garage, families will remember to set aside the corrugated
for recycling.
Corrugated boxes are sturdy shipping containers, used to safely
transport products to stores and homes year-round for over 100
years. Families doing more of their holiday shopping online means
more corrugated boxes are coming into their homes than ever. The
good news is those boxes are reusable, as storage and shipping
containers, and easily recyclable. In fact, corrugated box manufacturers
need the old corrugated containers to make new boxes.
Corrugated is easily identified by the wavy layer ("flutes")
in the middle, between two sheets of paper (usually brown). 
Many municipal recycling programs accept corrugated for recycling
in their curbside and drop-off collections. They typically ask
for residents to flatten the boxes before setting them out at
the curb or tossing them into collection bins at drop-off centers.
According to the Fibre Box Association, more than 76
percent of all corrugated produced in the U.S. last
year was recovered for recycling, and most boxes contain some
recycled fiber already. More than 77 percent of the nearly 25
million tons of old corrugated containers recovered in 2005 was
used to make new corrugated or paperboard.

For more information about recycling corrugated, visit http://www.corrugated.org.
For collection details or drop-off locations in your area, call
your local public works department.
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