fbpx
Wikipedia

Upcycling

Upcycling, also known as creative reuse, is the process of transforming by-products, waste materials, useless, or unwanted products into new materials or products perceived to be of greater quality, such as artistic value or environmental value.

Food cans upcycled into a stool

Description

Upcycling is the opposite of downcycling, which is the other part of the recycling process. Downcycling involves converting materials and products into new materials, sometimes of lesser quality. Most recycling involves converting or extracting useful materials from a product and creating a different product or material.[1]

 
This upcycled cutting board was made from boxcar floorboards that were taken from a railroad salvage yard.
 
Footbridge supported on a former wind turbine blade in Szprotawa

The terms upcycling and downcycling were first used in print in an article in SalvoNEWS by Thornton Kay quoting Reiner Pilz and published in 1994.[2]

We talked about the impending EU Demolition Waste Streams directive. "Recycling," he said, "I call it downcycling. They smash bricks, they smash everything. What we need is upcycling, where old products are given more value, not less." He despairs of the German situation and recalls the supply of a large quantity of reclaimed woodblock from an English supplier for a contract in Nuremberg, while just down the road a load of similar block was scrapped. In the road outside his premises was the result of the Germans' demolition "waste" recycling. It was a pinky looking aggregate with pieces of handmade brick, old tiles, and discernible parts of useful old items mixed with crushed concrete. Is this the future for Europe?

Upsizing was the title of the German edition of a book about upcycling first published in English in 1998 by Gunter Pauli and given the revised title of Upcycling in 1999. The German edition was adapted to the German language and culture by Johannes F. Hartkemeyer, then Director of the Volkshochschule in Osnabrück. The concept was later incorporated by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their 2002 book Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things. They state that the goal of upcycling is to prevent wasting potentially useful materials by making use of existing ones. This reduces the consumption of new raw materials when creating new products. Reducing the use of new raw materials can result in a reduction of energy usage, air pollution, water pollution and even greenhouse gas emissions.

This is a significant step towards regenerative design culture where the end products are cleaner, healthier, and usually have a better value than the material inputs. For example, during the recycling process of plastics other than those used to create bottles, many different types of plastics are mixed, resulting in a hybrid. This hybrid is used in the manufacturing of plastic lumber applications. However, unlike the engineered polymer ABS which hold properties of several plastics well, recycled plastics suffer phase-separation that causes structural weakness in the final product.

In 2009, Belinda Smith from Reuters wrote that upcycling had increased in the rich countries but observed that upcycling was a necessity in poorer ones:

Supporters of the environmentally friendly practice of upcycling say people in developing countries have effectively been upcycling for years, using old packaging and clothing in new ways, although more out of need than for the environment. But upcycling is now taking off in other countries, reflecting an increased interest in eco-friendly products, particularly ones that are priced at an affordable level and proving profitable for the manufacturers. "If upcycling is going to become mainstream, then the corporate world needs to see that it can be profitable," said Albe Zakes, spokesman of U.S. company TerraCycle which specializes in finding new uses for discarded packaging. A growing number of companies are focusing on upcycling although the trend is still in its infancy with industry-wide figures yet to be produced.[3]

Upcycling has shown significant growth across the United States and the World. For example, the number of products on Etsy, Pinterest or Upcycle Studio tagged with the word "upcycled" increased from about 7,900 in January 2010 to nearly 30,000 a year later .[4] As of April 2013, that number stood at 263,685.[5]

Material downcycling occurs when it is either not possible or uneconomic to restore materials to their original quality, for example, when wrought aluminium alloys are melted to produce lower-grade casting alloys.[6] Material upcycling, in the thermodynamic sense, is only possible if even more energy is added to upgrade the material quality.[6] Two guiding questions to ask when assessing recovering for waste materials or products are: How much energy is required to restore the recovered material back to the desired material or product?, and, How does this quantity compare with obtaining the desired material or product from virgin or primary sources? In some cases, little energy is required to reuse a discarded product, for example, secondhand clothing. In other cases, the energy required to recover the materials is more than the energy required to process virgin material.[6]

Recyling and Upcycling

While recycling usually means the materials are remade into their original form, e.g., recycling plastic bottles into plastic polymers, which then produce plastic bottles through the manufacturing process, upcycling adds more value to the materials, as the name suggested. According to Watson & Wolfe "Upcycling, also known as creative reuse, is the process of transforming by-products, waste materials, useless, or unwanted products into new materials or products perceived to be of greater quality, such as artistic value or environmental value."[7]

Similarly, recycle art may refer to art pieces using used materials in their original form while upcycle art may involve a transformation process such as breaking down, reforming, reassembling, and the like.

A common concept in Recycling is the 3Rs, which represent Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. According to "The Upcycle Artist's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Creating Art from Waste" published by Upcycle Art And Craft Society (UAACS). [8] They coined a 3Rs principle for upcycling: Rethink, Reform, and Reborn.

"Rethink" involves reevaluating something and looking at an item from a new perspective. It means seeing the potential for repurposing, giving it a new function, or exploring other creative possibilities for that material. "Reform" involves physically altering the item, either by dismantling it, combining it with other materials, or using different techniques to change its form. This transformation of existing materials creates a new structure that better suits the artist's creative vision. "Reborn" is the final outcome when the upcycled item is given new life or purpose. It's like a resurrection of cast-offs that are given a second life"[9]

Applications

Art

 
Johann Dieter Wassmann (Jeff Wassmann), Vorwarts! (Go Forward!) [sic], 1897
 
A toy from Southern Mount Hebron, on loan to Israel Museum from a private collection

Upcycle Art or sometimes known as Recycled Art or Recycl’Art is the transformation of waste or used materials and objects into art pieces.[10]

The tradition of reusing found objects (objet trouvé) in mainstream art came of age sporadically through the 20th century, although it has long been a means of production in folk art. The Amish quilt, for example, came about through reapplication of salvaged fabric. Simon Rodia's Watts Towers (1921–1954) in Los Angeles exemplifies upcycling of scrap metal, pottery and broken glass on a grand scale; it consists of 17 structures, the tallest reaching over 30 meters into the Watts skyline.

Intellectually, upcycling bears some resemblance to the ready-made art of Marcel Duchamp and the Dadaists. Duchamp's "Bicycle Wheel" (1913), a front wheel and fork attached to a common stool, is among the earliest of these works, while "Fountain" (1917), a common urinal purchased at a hardware store, is arguably his best-known work. Pablo Picasso's "Bull's Head" (1942), a sculpture made from a discarded bicycle saddle and handlebars, is the Spanish painter's sly nod to the Dadaists.[11] Throughout the mid-century, the artist Joseph Cornell fabricated collages and boxed assemblage works from old books, found objects and ephemera. Robert Rauschenberg collected trash and disused objects, first in Morocco and later on the streets of New York, to incorporate into his art works.

The idea of consciously raising the inherent value of recycled objects as a political statement, however, rather than presenting recycled objects as a reflection or outcome from the means of production, is largely a late 20th-century concept. Romuald Hazoumé, an artist from the West African Bénin, was heralded in 2007 for his use of discarded plastic gasoline and fuel canisters to resemble traditional African masks at Documenta 12 in Kassel, Germany. Hazoumé has said of these works, "I send back to the West that which belongs to them, that is to say, the refuse of consumer society that invades us every day."[12] Jeff Wassmann, an American artist who has lived in Australia for the past 25 years, uses items found on beaches and junk stores in his travels to create the early Modern works of a fictional German relative, Johann Dieter Wassmann (1841–1898). In Vorwarts (Go Forward) (pictured), Wassmann uses four simple objects to depict a vision of modern man on the precarious eave of the 20th century: an early optometry chart as background, a clock spring as eye, a 19th-century Chinese bone opium spoon from the Australian gold fields as nose and an upper set of dentures found on an Australian beach as mouth. Wassmann is unusual among artists in that he does not sell his work, rather they are presented as gifts; by not allowing these works to re-enter the consumer cycle, he averts the commodification of his end product.[13]

Max Zorn is a Dutch tape artist who creates artwork from ordinary brown packaging tape and hangs pieces on street lamps as a new form of street art at night. By adding and subtracting layers of tape on acrylic glass with a surgical scalpel, the artwork can only be visible when light is placed behind it, mimicking the effects similar to stained glass window methods. His technique with pioneering upcycling with street art has been featured at Frei-Cycle 2013, the first design fair for recycling and upcycling in Freiburg, Germany.[14]

Music

A prominent example is the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura in Paraguay. The instruments of the orchestra are made from materials taken from the landfill of Asunción, whose name comes from the Cateura lagoon in the area. A limited part of its real history is narrated in the film Landfill Harmonic.[15][16]

Industry

Many industrial processes, like plastic, paint, and electronic fabrication, rely on the consumption of finite resources.[17][18][19] Furthermore, the waste may have an environmental impact and can affect human health.[17] Within this context, upcycling describes the use of available and future technologies to reduce waste and resource consumption by creating a product with a higher value from waste or byproduct streams.[20]

In consumer electronics, the process of re-manufacturing or refurbishment of second-hand products can be seen as upcycling because of the reduced energy and material consumption in contrast to new manufacturing. The re-manufactured product has a higher value than disposing or downcycling it.[21] The use of Brewer's spent grain, a waste product of brewing processes, as a substrate in biogas processes eliminates the need for disposal and can generate significant profit to the overall brewing process. Depending on the substrate's price, a profit of approximately 20% of the operational costs is possible. In this process, the biogas plant acts as an "upcycler".[17]

 
Roses made from upcycled library books.

Clothes

 
A woman wearing an upcycled dress.

Designers have begun to use both industrial textile waste and existing clothing like as the base material for creating new fashions. Upcycling has been known to use either pre-consumer or post-consumer waste or possibly a combination of the two. Pre-consumer waste is made while in the factory, such as fabric remnants left over from cutting out patterns. Post-consumer waste refers to the finished product when it’s no longer useful to the owner, such as donated clothes.[22] Textile upcycling has an official certification process called UPMADE®.[23] Fashion designers such as Ksenia Schnaider and Reet Aus have applied upcycling philosophy by designing entire collections from scraps.[24][25]

Often, people practice linear economy where they are content to buy, use, then throw away. This system contributes to millions of kilos of textile waste being thrown away. While most textiles produced are recyclable, around 85% end-up in landfills in the USA alone.[26] To live a sustainable life, clothing options opposite to the "throw away" attitude encouraged by fast fashion are needed. Upcycling can help with this, as it puts into practice a more circular economy model. A Circular Economy is where resources are used for as long as possible, getting the most value out of them while in use, then restored and repurposed when their use is over. Popularized by McDonough and Braungart, this has also been known as the cradle-to-cradle principle. This principle states a product should be designed either to have multiple life cycles or be biodegradable.[27]

Food

Billions of pounds of food are wasted every year around the world, but there are ways that people reuse food and find a way to upcycle. One common method is to feed it to animals because many animals, such as pigs, will eat all the scraps given. Food waste can be donated and restaurants can save all the food customers don't eat. Donations can also be made by contacting local agricultural extension offices to find out where to donate food waste and how often and how much one can donate.[28]

Another form of upcycling food is to break it down and use it as energy. Engineers have found a way to break the food down into a reusable bio-fuel by pressure cooking it and then they are able to make methane out of the remains which can be used to produce electricity and heat.[29] When the food isn't used in those ways, another way is to just break it down and use it in compost, which will improve the soil. Many types of food waste, such as fruits, vegetables, egg shells, nuts, and nut shells, can be used in compost to enrich soil.[30] A 2019-founded non-profit, The Upcycled Food Association, established certification standards and a logo that allows consumers to be confident of the upcycled food being consumed. Whole Foods named upcycling one of the ten food trends of 2021.[31]

Design processes

Tonnes of wastes are produced every day in our cities, and some educators are attempting to raise citizens' awareness, especially the youth. To redefine the concept of recycling previously confined to trash categorization, groups of young designers have attempted to transform "trash" into potentially marketable products such as backpacks made of waste plastic bags[32][33] and area rugs created by reusing hides. One relevant book published by Community Museum Project in Hong Kong in 2010, was the first experiment on upcycling systems design. Spanning across material collecting, upcycling design, local production and public dissemination, it provides proposals towards a sustainable system that will cast impact on our strategies of waste handling and energy saving.[34]

Hong Kong local inventor Gary Chan is actively involved in designing and making 'upcycling' bikes by making use of waste materials as parts for his bikes. He invented at least 8 bikes using wastes as a majority of the materials.[35][36] Gary and his partners at Wheel Thing Makers regularly collect useful wastes such as leather skin from sofas, hardwood plates of wardrobes, or rubber tires from vehicle repair stores in the waste collection station on streets.[37]

Potential technologies

The worldwide plastic production was 280 million tons in 2011 and production levels are growing every year. Its haphazard disposal causes severe environmental damage, such as the creation of the Great Pacific garbage patch.[18] In 2018, global annual plastic consumption grew to over 320 million tons.[38] In order to solve this problem, the employment of modern technologies and processes to reuse the waste plastic as a cheap substrate is under research. The goal is to bring this material from the waste stream back into the mainstream by developing processes, which will create an economic demand for them. [39]

One approach in the field involves the conversion of waste plastics (like LDPE, PET, and HDPE) into paramagnetic, conducting microspheres[40] or into carbon nano-materials by applying high temperatures and chemical vapor deposition.[41] On a molecular level, the treatment of polymers like polypropylene or thermoplastics with electron beams (doses around 150 kGy) can increase material properties like bending strength and elasticity and provides an eco-friendly and sustainable way to upcycle them.[40][42] Active research is being carried out for the biotransformation upcycling of plastic waste (e.g., polyethylene terephthalate and polyurethane) into PHA bioplastic using bacteria.[43] PET could be converted into the biodegradable PHA by using a combination of temperature and microbial treatment. First it gets pyrolized at 450 °C and the resulting terephthalic acid is used as a substrate for microorganisms, which convert it finally into PHA.[44] Similar to the aforementioned approach is the combination of nano-materials like carbon nanotubes with powdered orange peel as a composite material. This might be used to remove synthetic dyes from wastewater.[45]

Biotechnology companies have recently shifted focus towards the conversion of agricultural waste, or biomass, to different chemicals or commodities. One company in particular, BioTork, has signed an agreement with the State of Hawaii and the USDA to convert the unmarketable papayas in Hawaii into fish feed. As part of this Zero Waste Initiative put forth by the State of Hawaii, BioTork will upcycle the otherwise wasted biomass into fish feed.[46]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Recycling" (PDF). Environmental Protection Agency. Retrieved 2015-05-14.
  2. ^ Thornton Kay, Salvo in Germany - Reiner Pilz, p14 SalvoNEWS No99 11 October 1994
  3. ^ Goldsmith, Belinda (2009-09-30). "Trash or Treasure? Upcycling Becomes Growing Green Trend". Reuters. Retrieved 2009-12-02.
  4. ^ "Upcycling Becomes a Treasure Trove for Green Business Ideas". Entrepreneur Magazine. March 22, 2011. Retrieved 2013-05-14.
  5. ^ "Upcycle trend hits Faribault area". Southernminn.com.
  6. ^ a b c Cullen, Jonathan (2017). "Circular Economy: Theoretical Benchmark or Perpetual Motion Machine?". Journal of Industrial Ecology. 21 (3): 483–486. doi:10.1111/jiec.12599. S2CID 157935815.
  7. ^ Recycled Art, a form of Environmental Activism Watson Life. 4 January 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2023
  8. ^ [https://www.uaacs.org. Retrieved 11 July 2023
  9. ^ Upcycle Art And Craft Society (2023). The Upcycle Artist's Handbook: A Comprehensive Guide to Creating Art from Waste. Upcycle Art And Craft Society.
  10. ^ "ART AND UPCYCLED :: Clicrecycle.net". 20 January 2023.
  11. ^ Gibson, Eric, "A Magical Metamorphosis of the Ordinary", The Wall Street Journal, April 16, 2011.
  12. ^ "Romuald Hazoumé". Contemporary African Art Collection – The Pigozzi Collection.
  13. ^ Crawford, Ashley, "Hoax Most Perfect", The Age, October 11, 2003.
  14. ^ "Designmesse für Recycling & Upcycling". Retrieved 29 October 2013.
  15. ^ Tsioulcas, Anastasia (14 September 2016). "From Trash To Triumph: The Recycled Orchestra". NPR. Washington, D. C. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  16. ^ "Landfill Harmonic: The Recycled Orchestra: making music on a landfill site". www.classicfm.com. Retrieved 31 January 2017.
  17. ^ a b c Martin, M. and Parsapour, A. 2012. "Upcycling wastes with biogas production: An exergy and economic analysis". Venice 2012: International Symposium on Energy from Biomass and Waste (2012).
  18. ^ a b Zhuo, C. and Levendis, Y. A. 2014. "Upcycling waste plastics into carbon nanomaterials: A review". Journal of Applied Polymer Science. 131, 4 (2014)
  19. ^ "About". Up Paint. Retrieved 2021-04-23.
  20. ^ Sung, K.; Cooper, T.; Kettley, S. (2014). Individual Upcycling Practice: Exploring the Possible Determinants of Upcycling Based on a Literature Review. Sustainable Innovation 2014 Conference. Copenhagen.
  21. ^ Steinhilper, R. and Hieber, M. 2001. "Remanufacturing-the key solution for transforming downcycling into upcycling of electronics". Electronics and the Environment, 2001. Proceedings of the 2001 IEEE International Symposium on (2001), 161–166.
  22. ^ Beth Stewart (May 8, 2014). "Upcycling: The New Wave of Sustainable Fashion".
  23. ^ Flora Macdonald Johnston (Jan 31, 2020). "1/Off Paris — the French label making upcycling sexy". Financial Times.
  24. ^ Fiona Zublin (Dec 14, 2020). "Ksenia Schnaider Knows How To Make Upcycled Fashion Beautiful". Forbes.
  25. ^ Fiona Zublin (Jun 25, 2018). "The Next Big Thing In Fashion: Scraps".
  26. ^ Weber, Sabine; Lynes, Jennifer; Young, Steven B. (March 2017). "Fashion interest as a driver for consumer textile waste management: reuse, recycle or disposal". International Journal of Consumer Studies. 41 (2): 207–215. doi:10.1111/ijcs.12328.
  27. ^ Claudia E. Henninger; Panayiota J. Alevizou; Helen Goworek; Daniella Ryding, eds. (2017). Sustainability in Fashion. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-51253-2. ISBN 978-3-319-51252-5.
  28. ^ "Reduce wasted food by feeding animals". epa.gov. 2015-08-12.
  29. ^ "Industrial uses for wasted food". epa.gov. 2015-08-12.
  30. ^ "reducing the impact of wasted food by feeding the soil and composting". epa.gov. 2015-08-12.
  31. ^ Zaraska, Martha (September 18, 2021). "Upcycling food waste onto our plates is a new effort. But will consumers find it appetizing?". The Washington Post.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  32. ^ "Up-Fuse".
  33. ^ "Kubrick Web Shop".
  34. ^ "升級再造3:廢物‧迷思". Apple Daily 蘋果日報. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  35. ^ "土炮發明王". www.metropop.com.hk (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). 2014-10-16. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  36. ^ "Gary Chan is the bad boy of bicycle building in Hong Kong". Young Post | South China Morning Post. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  37. ^ "E Media+ | E週刊 | e+娛樂 | Mode | 美食旅客". eweekly.hk. Retrieved 2016-03-23.
  38. ^ Lebreton, L.; Slat, B.; Ferrari, F.; Sainte-Rose, B.; Aitken, J.; Marthouse, R.; Hajbane, S.; Cunsolo, S.; Schwarz, A.; Levivier, A.; Noble, K.; Debeljak, P.; Maral, H.; Schoeneich-Argent, R.; Brambini, R. (2018-03-22). "Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic". Scientific Reports. 8 (1): 4666. Bibcode:2018NatSR...8.4666L. doi:10.1038/s41598-018-22939-w. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 5864935. PMID 29568057.
  39. ^ Kok, Femke. "upcycling". nimms.
  40. ^ a b Mondal, M., Gohs, U., Wagenknecht, U. and Heinrich, G. 2013. "Polypropylene/natural rubber thermoplastic vulcanizates by eco-friendly and sustainable electron induced reactive processing". Radiation Physics and Chemistry. 88, 0 (2013), 74–81.
  41. ^ Altalhi, Tariq; Kumeria, Tushar; Santos, Abel; Losic, Dusan (2013). "Synthesis of well-organised carbon nanotube membranes from non-degradable plastic bags with tuneable molecular transport: Towards nanotechnological recycling". Carbon. 63: 423–433. doi:10.1016/j.carbon.2013.07.003.
  42. ^ Czvikovszky, T. and Hargitai, H. 1997. "Electron beam surface modifications in reinforcing and recycling of polymers. Nuclear Instruments and Methods" in Physics Research Section B: Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms. 131, 1–4 (1997), 300–304.
  43. ^ "Homepage – P4SB". www.p4sb.eu. Retrieved 2017-10-26.
  44. ^ Kenny, S.T., Runic, J.N., Kaminsky, W., Woods, T., Babu, R.P., Keely, C.M., Blau, W. and O’Connor, K.E. 2008. "Up-Cycling of PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate) to the Biodegradable Plastic PHA (Polyhydroxyalkanoate)". Environmental Science & Technology. 42, 20 (2008), 7696–7701.
  45. ^ Jain, N., Basniwal, R. K., Suman, Srivastava, A. K., & Jain, V. K. (2010). "Reusable nanomaterial and plant biomass composites for the removal of methylene blue from water", Environmental Technology, 31(7), 755-760.
  46. ^ "Hawaii Funds BioTork Advanced Biofuel Technology". Domestic Fuel. 2014-08-07.

External links

upcycling, also, known, creative, reuse, process, transforming, products, waste, materials, useless, unwanted, products, into, materials, products, perceived, greater, quality, such, artistic, value, environmental, value, food, cans, upcycled, into, stool, con. Upcycling also known as creative reuse is the process of transforming by products waste materials useless or unwanted products into new materials or products perceived to be of greater quality such as artistic value or environmental value Food cans upcycled into a stool Contents 1 Description 2 Recyling and Upcycling 3 Applications 3 1 Art 3 2 Music 3 3 Industry 3 4 Clothes 3 5 Food 3 6 Design processes 4 Potential technologies 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksDescription EditUpcycling is the opposite of downcycling which is the other part of the recycling process Downcycling involves converting materials and products into new materials sometimes of lesser quality Most recycling involves converting or extracting useful materials from a product and creating a different product or material 1 This upcycled cutting board was made from boxcar floorboards that were taken from a railroad salvage yard Footbridge supported on a former wind turbine blade in SzprotawaThe terms upcycling and downcycling were first used in print in an article in SalvoNEWS by Thornton Kay quoting Reiner Pilz and published in 1994 2 We talked about the impending EU Demolition Waste Streams directive Recycling he said I call it downcycling They smash bricks they smash everything What we need is upcycling where old products are given more value not less He despairs of the German situation and recalls the supply of a large quantity of reclaimed woodblock from an English supplier for a contract in Nuremberg while just down the road a load of similar block was scrapped In the road outside his premises was the result of the Germans demolition waste recycling It was a pinky looking aggregate with pieces of handmade brick old tiles and discernible parts of useful old items mixed with crushed concrete Is this the future for Europe Upsizing was the title of the German edition of a book about upcycling first published in English in 1998 by Gunter Pauli and given the revised title of Upcycling in 1999 The German edition was adapted to the German language and culture by Johannes F Hartkemeyer then Director of the Volkshochschule in Osnabruck The concept was later incorporated by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their 2002 book Cradle to Cradle Remaking the Way We Make Things They state that the goal of upcycling is to prevent wasting potentially useful materials by making use of existing ones This reduces the consumption of new raw materials when creating new products Reducing the use of new raw materials can result in a reduction of energy usage air pollution water pollution and even greenhouse gas emissions This is a significant step towards regenerative design culture where the end products are cleaner healthier and usually have a better value than the material inputs For example during the recycling process of plastics other than those used to create bottles many different types of plastics are mixed resulting in a hybrid This hybrid is used in the manufacturing of plastic lumber applications However unlike the engineered polymer ABS which hold properties of several plastics well recycled plastics suffer phase separation that causes structural weakness in the final product In 2009 Belinda Smith from Reuters wrote that upcycling had increased in the rich countries but observed that upcycling was a necessity in poorer ones Supporters of the environmentally friendly practice of upcycling say people in developing countries have effectively been upcycling for years using old packaging and clothing in new ways although more out of need than for the environment But upcycling is now taking off in other countries reflecting an increased interest in eco friendly products particularly ones that are priced at an affordable level and proving profitable for the manufacturers If upcycling is going to become mainstream then the corporate world needs to see that it can be profitable said Albe Zakes spokesman of U S company TerraCycle which specializes in finding new uses for discarded packaging A growing number of companies are focusing on upcycling although the trend is still in its infancy with industry wide figures yet to be produced 3 Upcycling has shown significant growth across the United States and the World For example the number of products on Etsy Pinterest or Upcycle Studio tagged with the word upcycled increased from about 7 900 in January 2010 to nearly 30 000 a year later 4 As of April 2013 update that number stood at 263 685 5 Material downcycling occurs when it is either not possible or uneconomic to restore materials to their original quality for example when wrought aluminium alloys are melted to produce lower grade casting alloys 6 Material upcycling in the thermodynamic sense is only possible if even more energy is added to upgrade the material quality 6 Two guiding questions to ask when assessing recovering for waste materials or products are How much energy is required to restore the recovered material back to the desired material or product and How does this quantity compare with obtaining the desired material or product from virgin or primary sources In some cases little energy is required to reuse a discarded product for example secondhand clothing In other cases the energy required to recover the materials is more than the energy required to process virgin material 6 Recyling and Upcycling EditWhile recycling usually means the materials are remade into their original form e g recycling plastic bottles into plastic polymers which then produce plastic bottles through the manufacturing process upcycling adds more value to the materials as the name suggested According to Watson amp Wolfe Upcycling also known as creative reuse is the process of transforming by products waste materials useless or unwanted products into new materials or products perceived to be of greater quality such as artistic value or environmental value 7 Similarly recycle art may refer to art pieces using used materials in their original form while upcycle art may involve a transformation process such as breaking down reforming reassembling and the like A common concept in Recycling is the 3Rs which represent Reduce Reuse and Recycle According to The Upcycle Artist s Handbook A Comprehensive Guide to Creating Art from Waste published by Upcycle Art And Craft Society UAACS 8 They coined a 3Rs principle for upcycling Rethink Reform and Reborn Rethink involves reevaluating something and looking at an item from a new perspective It means seeing the potential for repurposing giving it a new function or exploring other creative possibilities for that material Reform involves physically altering the item either by dismantling it combining it with other materials or using different techniques to change its form This transformation of existing materials creates a new structure that better suits the artist s creative vision Reborn is the final outcome when the upcycled item is given new life or purpose It s like a resurrection of cast offs that are given a second life 9 Applications EditArt Edit Johann Dieter Wassmann Jeff Wassmann Vorwarts Go Forward sic 1897 A toy from Southern Mount Hebron on loan to Israel Museum from a private collectionUpcycle Art or sometimes known as Recycled Art or Recycl Art is the transformation of waste or used materials and objects into art pieces 10 The tradition of reusing found objects objet trouve in mainstream art came of age sporadically through the 20th century although it has long been a means of production in folk art The Amish quilt for example came about through reapplication of salvaged fabric Simon Rodia s Watts Towers 1921 1954 in Los Angeles exemplifies upcycling of scrap metal pottery and broken glass on a grand scale it consists of 17 structures the tallest reaching over 30 meters into the Watts skyline Intellectually upcycling bears some resemblance to the ready made art of Marcel Duchamp and the Dadaists Duchamp s Bicycle Wheel 1913 a front wheel and fork attached to a common stool is among the earliest of these works while Fountain 1917 a common urinal purchased at a hardware store is arguably his best known work Pablo Picasso s Bull s Head 1942 a sculpture made from a discarded bicycle saddle and handlebars is the Spanish painter s sly nod to the Dadaists 11 Throughout the mid century the artist Joseph Cornell fabricated collages and boxed assemblage works from old books found objects and ephemera Robert Rauschenberg collected trash and disused objects first in Morocco and later on the streets of New York to incorporate into his art works The idea of consciously raising the inherent value of recycled objects as a political statement however rather than presenting recycled objects as a reflection or outcome from the means of production is largely a late 20th century concept Romuald Hazoume an artist from the West African Benin was heralded in 2007 for his use of discarded plastic gasoline and fuel canisters to resemble traditional African masks at Documenta 12 in Kassel Germany Hazoume has said of these works I send back to the West that which belongs to them that is to say the refuse of consumer society that invades us every day 12 Jeff Wassmann an American artist who has lived in Australia for the past 25 years uses items found on beaches and junk stores in his travels to create the early Modern works of a fictional German relative Johann Dieter Wassmann 1841 1898 In Vorwarts Go Forward pictured Wassmann uses four simple objects to depict a vision of modern man on the precarious eave of the 20th century an early optometry chart as background a clock spring as eye a 19th century Chinese bone opium spoon from the Australian gold fields as nose and an upper set of dentures found on an Australian beach as mouth Wassmann is unusual among artists in that he does not sell his work rather they are presented as gifts by not allowing these works to re enter the consumer cycle he averts the commodification of his end product 13 Max Zorn is a Dutch tape artist who creates artwork from ordinary brown packaging tape and hangs pieces on street lamps as a new form of street art at night By adding and subtracting layers of tape on acrylic glass with a surgical scalpel the artwork can only be visible when light is placed behind it mimicking the effects similar to stained glass window methods His technique with pioneering upcycling with street art has been featured at Frei Cycle 2013 the first design fair for recycling and upcycling in Freiburg Germany 14 Music Edit A prominent example is the Recycled Orchestra of Cateura in Paraguay The instruments of the orchestra are made from materials taken from the landfill of Asuncion whose name comes from the Cateura lagoon in the area A limited part of its real history is narrated in the film Landfill Harmonic 15 16 Industry Edit Many industrial processes like plastic paint and electronic fabrication rely on the consumption of finite resources 17 18 19 Furthermore the waste may have an environmental impact and can affect human health 17 Within this context upcycling describes the use of available and future technologies to reduce waste and resource consumption by creating a product with a higher value from waste or byproduct streams 20 In consumer electronics the process of re manufacturing or refurbishment of second hand products can be seen as upcycling because of the reduced energy and material consumption in contrast to new manufacturing The re manufactured product has a higher value than disposing or downcycling it 21 The use of Brewer s spent grain a waste product of brewing processes as a substrate in biogas processes eliminates the need for disposal and can generate significant profit to the overall brewing process Depending on the substrate s price a profit of approximately 20 of the operational costs is possible In this process the biogas plant acts as an upcycler 17 Roses made from upcycled library books Clothes Edit See also Reconstructed clothing Sustainable fashion and Trashion A woman wearing an upcycled dress Designers have begun to use both industrial textile waste and existing clothing like as the base material for creating new fashions Upcycling has been known to use either pre consumer or post consumer waste or possibly a combination of the two Pre consumer waste is made while in the factory such as fabric remnants left over from cutting out patterns Post consumer waste refers to the finished product when it s no longer useful to the owner such as donated clothes 22 Textile upcycling has an official certification process called UPMADE 23 Fashion designers such as Ksenia Schnaider and Reet Aus have applied upcycling philosophy by designing entire collections from scraps 24 25 Often people practice linear economy where they are content to buy use then throw away This system contributes to millions of kilos of textile waste being thrown away While most textiles produced are recyclable around 85 end up in landfills in the USA alone 26 To live a sustainable life clothing options opposite to the throw away attitude encouraged by fast fashion are needed Upcycling can help with this as it puts into practice a more circular economy model A Circular Economy is where resources are used for as long as possible getting the most value out of them while in use then restored and repurposed when their use is over Popularized by McDonough and Braungart this has also been known as the cradle to cradle principle This principle states a product should be designed either to have multiple life cycles or be biodegradable 27 Food Edit Billions of pounds of food are wasted every year around the world but there are ways that people reuse food and find a way to upcycle One common method is to feed it to animals because many animals such as pigs will eat all the scraps given Food waste can be donated and restaurants can save all the food customers don t eat Donations can also be made by contacting local agricultural extension offices to find out where to donate food waste and how often and how much one can donate 28 Another form of upcycling food is to break it down and use it as energy Engineers have found a way to break the food down into a reusable bio fuel by pressure cooking it and then they are able to make methane out of the remains which can be used to produce electricity and heat 29 When the food isn t used in those ways another way is to just break it down and use it in compost which will improve the soil Many types of food waste such as fruits vegetables egg shells nuts and nut shells can be used in compost to enrich soil 30 A 2019 founded non profit The Upcycled Food Association established certification standards and a logo that allows consumers to be confident of the upcycled food being consumed Whole Foods named upcycling one of the ten food trends of 2021 31 Design processes Edit Tonnes of wastes are produced every day in our cities and some educators are attempting to raise citizens awareness especially the youth To redefine the concept of recycling previously confined to trash categorization groups of young designers have attempted to transform trash into potentially marketable products such as backpacks made of waste plastic bags 32 33 and area rugs created by reusing hides One relevant book published by Community Museum Project in Hong Kong in 2010 was the first experiment on upcycling systems design Spanning across material collecting upcycling design local production and public dissemination it provides proposals towards a sustainable system that will cast impact on our strategies of waste handling and energy saving 34 Hong Kong local inventor Gary Chan is actively involved in designing and making upcycling bikes by making use of waste materials as parts for his bikes He invented at least 8 bikes using wastes as a majority of the materials 35 36 Gary and his partners at Wheel Thing Makers regularly collect useful wastes such as leather skin from sofas hardwood plates of wardrobes or rubber tires from vehicle repair stores in the waste collection station on streets 37 Potential technologies EditThe worldwide plastic production was 280 million tons in 2011 and production levels are growing every year Its haphazard disposal causes severe environmental damage such as the creation of the Great Pacific garbage patch 18 In 2018 global annual plastic consumption grew to over 320 million tons 38 In order to solve this problem the employment of modern technologies and processes to reuse the waste plastic as a cheap substrate is under research The goal is to bring this material from the waste stream back into the mainstream by developing processes which will create an economic demand for them 39 One approach in the field involves the conversion of waste plastics like LDPE PET and HDPE into paramagnetic conducting microspheres 40 or into carbon nano materials by applying high temperatures and chemical vapor deposition 41 On a molecular level the treatment of polymers like polypropylene or thermoplastics with electron beams doses around 150 kGy can increase material properties like bending strength and elasticity and provides an eco friendly and sustainable way to upcycle them 40 42 Active research is being carried out for the biotransformation upcycling of plastic waste e g polyethylene terephthalate and polyurethane into PHA bioplastic using bacteria 43 PET could be converted into the biodegradable PHA by using a combination of temperature and microbial treatment First it gets pyrolized at 450 C and the resulting terephthalic acid is used as a substrate for microorganisms which convert it finally into PHA 44 Similar to the aforementioned approach is the combination of nano materials like carbon nanotubes with powdered orange peel as a composite material This might be used to remove synthetic dyes from wastewater 45 Biotechnology companies have recently shifted focus towards the conversion of agricultural waste or biomass to different chemicals or commodities One company in particular BioTork has signed an agreement with the State of Hawaii and the USDA to convert the unmarketable papayas in Hawaii into fish feed As part of this Zero Waste Initiative put forth by the State of Hawaii BioTork will upcycle the otherwise wasted biomass into fish feed 46 See also Edit Environment portalEnvironmentalism Food rescue Reuse Scrapstore Trashion Waste hierarchyReferences Edit Recycling PDF Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 2015 05 14 Thornton Kay Salvo in Germany Reiner Pilz p14 SalvoNEWS No99 11 October 1994 Goldsmith Belinda 2009 09 30 Trash or Treasure Upcycling Becomes Growing Green Trend Reuters Retrieved 2009 12 02 Upcycling Becomes a Treasure Trove for Green Business Ideas Entrepreneur Magazine March 22 2011 Retrieved 2013 05 14 Upcycle trend hits Faribault area Southernminn com a b c Cullen Jonathan 2017 Circular Economy Theoretical Benchmark or Perpetual Motion Machine Journal of Industrial Ecology 21 3 483 486 doi 10 1111 jiec 12599 S2CID 157935815 Recycled Art a form of Environmental Activism Watson Life 4 January 2021 Retrieved 11 March 2023 https www uaacs org Retrieved 11 July 2023 Upcycle Art And Craft Society 2023 The Upcycle Artist s Handbook A Comprehensive Guide to Creating Art from Waste Upcycle Art And Craft Society ART AND UPCYCLED Clicrecycle net 20 January 2023 Gibson Eric A Magical Metamorphosis of the Ordinary The Wall Street Journal April 16 2011 Romuald Hazoume Contemporary African Art Collection The Pigozzi Collection Crawford Ashley Hoax Most Perfect The Age October 11 2003 Designmesse fur Recycling amp Upcycling Retrieved 29 October 2013 Tsioulcas Anastasia 14 September 2016 From Trash To Triumph The Recycled Orchestra NPR Washington D C Retrieved 31 January 2017 Landfill Harmonic The Recycled Orchestra making music on a landfill site www classicfm com Retrieved 31 January 2017 a b c Martin M and Parsapour A 2012 Upcycling wastes with biogas production An exergy and economic analysis Venice 2012 International Symposium on Energy from Biomass and Waste 2012 a b Zhuo C and Levendis Y A 2014 Upcycling waste plastics into carbon nanomaterials A review Journal of Applied Polymer Science 131 4 2014 About Up Paint Retrieved 2021 04 23 Sung K Cooper T Kettley S 2014 Individual Upcycling Practice Exploring the Possible Determinants of Upcycling Based on a Literature Review Sustainable Innovation 2014 Conference Copenhagen Steinhilper R and Hieber M 2001 Remanufacturing the key solution for transforming downcycling into upcycling of electronics Electronics and the Environment 2001 Proceedings of the 2001 IEEE International Symposium on 2001 161 166 Beth Stewart May 8 2014 Upcycling The New Wave of Sustainable Fashion Flora Macdonald Johnston Jan 31 2020 1 Off Paris the French label making upcycling sexy Financial Times Fiona Zublin Dec 14 2020 Ksenia Schnaider Knows How To Make Upcycled Fashion Beautiful Forbes Fiona Zublin Jun 25 2018 The Next Big Thing In Fashion Scraps Weber Sabine Lynes Jennifer Young Steven B March 2017 Fashion interest as a driver for consumer textile waste management reuse recycle or disposal International Journal of Consumer Studies 41 2 207 215 doi 10 1111 ijcs 12328 Claudia E Henninger Panayiota J Alevizou Helen Goworek Daniella Ryding eds 2017 Sustainability in Fashion doi 10 1007 978 3 319 51253 2 ISBN 978 3 319 51252 5 Reduce wasted food by feeding animals epa gov 2015 08 12 Industrial uses for wasted food epa gov 2015 08 12 reducing the impact of wasted food by feeding the soil and composting epa gov 2015 08 12 Zaraska Martha September 18 2021 Upcycling food waste onto our plates is a new effort But will consumers find it appetizing The Washington Post a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Up Fuse Kubrick Web Shop 升級再造3 廢物 迷思 Apple Daily 蘋果日報 Retrieved 2016 03 23 土炮發明王 www metropop com hk in Chinese Hong Kong 2014 10 16 Retrieved 2016 03 23 Gary Chan is the bad boy of bicycle building in Hong Kong Young Post South China Morning Post Retrieved 2016 03 23 E Media E週刊 e 娛樂 Mode 美食旅客 eweekly hk Retrieved 2016 03 23 Lebreton L Slat B Ferrari F Sainte Rose B Aitken J Marthouse R Hajbane S Cunsolo S Schwarz A Levivier A Noble K Debeljak P Maral H Schoeneich Argent R Brambini R 2018 03 22 Evidence that the Great Pacific Garbage Patch is rapidly accumulating plastic Scientific Reports 8 1 4666 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 4666L doi 10 1038 s41598 018 22939 w ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5864935 PMID 29568057 Kok Femke upcycling nimms a b Mondal M Gohs U Wagenknecht U and Heinrich G 2013 Polypropylene natural rubber thermoplastic vulcanizates by eco friendly and sustainable electron induced reactive processing Radiation Physics and Chemistry 88 0 2013 74 81 Altalhi Tariq Kumeria Tushar Santos Abel Losic Dusan 2013 Synthesis of well organised carbon nanotube membranes from non degradable plastic bags with tuneable molecular transport Towards nanotechnological recycling Carbon 63 423 433 doi 10 1016 j carbon 2013 07 003 Czvikovszky T and Hargitai H 1997 Electron beam surface modifications in reinforcing and recycling of polymers Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section B Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms 131 1 4 1997 300 304 Homepage P4SB www p4sb eu Retrieved 2017 10 26 Kenny S T Runic J N Kaminsky W Woods T Babu R P Keely C M Blau W and O Connor K E 2008 Up Cycling of PET Polyethylene Terephthalate to the Biodegradable Plastic PHA Polyhydroxyalkanoate Environmental Science amp Technology 42 20 2008 7696 7701 Jain N Basniwal R K Suman Srivastava A K amp Jain V K 2010 Reusable nanomaterial and plant biomass composites for the removal of methylene blue from water Environmental Technology 31 7 755 760 Hawaii Funds BioTork Advanced Biofuel Technology Domestic Fuel 2014 08 07 External links Edit Look up upcycle or upcycling in Wiktionary the free dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Upcycling amp oldid 1170316230, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.