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ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS <br />The environmental benefits of Roseville's zero -waste recycling program are quantified <br />transparently using widely -accepted environmental models. This ensures that all residents have a <br />chance to see how their efforts can be measured and quantified. <br />There are many ways to calculate the benefits of recycling. To better explain these benefits in <br />commonly understood terms, government agencies, research scientists, and economists have <br />created several "calculators" to translate the amounts of recycled materials collected, and processed <br />into equivalent positive societal and environmental benefits. <br />Because of the increasing societal focus on causes of, and solutions to, climate change, it has <br />become imperative to measure waste reduction (and all of our activities) in terms of its impact on <br />the environment. This allows us to speak in a common language, understand the impact of our <br />choices, and help us prioritize the personal, and policy actions that we take. Many cities around <br />the county work with the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives (ICLEI) to <br />quantify and now register the climate change impacts of their city. It is also important to calculate <br />the carbon impact of waste reduction as the global effort continues to enact a carbon "cap and <br />trade" system. <br />In addition to climate change mitigation, there are other environmental benefits to recycling, <br />including saving energy and protecting air quality, water quality, natural resources, natural beauty, <br />habitat, and human health. <br />The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) WARM Calculator <br />The equations used in environmental calculations try to take into account the "full life cycle" of <br />each material everything from offsetting the demand for more virgin materials (tree harvesting, <br />mining, etc.) to preventing the pollution that would have occurred if that material were disposed <br />of (burned or buried). Different calculators may include some or all of the many factors that <br />contribute to the "full life cycle" so results will vary from calculator to calculator. <br />While there are many models emerging to calculate greenhouse gas reductions, the most <br />recognized, and standard model is the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Waste Reduction <br />Model (WARM). WARM was designed to help solid waste planners, and organizations track, <br />and voluntarily report greenhouse gas emissions reductions from several different waste <br />management practices. WARM, last updated in June 2014, recognizes 46 material types. <br />12 <br />