WORLD
Use our resources to get some ideas about recycling and other ways of going green.
Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources in our Teachers Toolkit, including a link to today’s MapMaker Interactive map.

Photograph by Ludovic Péron, courtesy Wikimedia. CC-BY-SA-3.0
Discussion Ideas

- Read through the super-short New York Times article, or the longer OECD report here. Better yet, take a look at today’s MapMaker Interactive map! What countries top the recycling list?
- 1 Germany (65%)
- 2 South Korea (59%)
- 3 Austria (58%)
- Slovenia (58%)
- 5 Belgium (55%)
- 6 Switzerland (51%)
- 7 Sweden (50%)
- Netherlands (50%)
- 9 Luxembourg (48%)
- 10 Iceland (45%)
- What habits help Germany with successful recycling and composting programs?
- Bins are everywhere! They are found “on train cars and station platforms, town squares and public parks, schools, even soccer stadiums.” Most bins are labeled in multiple languages, making it easier for tourists to recycle.
- In Germany, bins come in six colors:
- black for unrecyclable waste
- brown for compost
- white for clear glass
- green for green glass
- yellow for plastics
- blue for paper and cardboard
- (Many areas, such as urban centers, have a single bin for glass and no bins for composting.)
- In Germany, bins come in six colors:
- Everyone is onboard! According to the New York Times, recycling “has become second nature among Germans.”
- Composting is mandated by law.
- “Germans are rarely shy about intercepting strangers on the verge of dropping a paper cup or empty soda bottle into the General Waste bin with a cry of, ‘Stop! That doesn’t go in there!’”
- Having said that, “even in Germany, you’ll find recycling rebels. Instead of sorting, they just throw it all in a big can marked General Waste, and they scoff at their dutiful neighbors who lug out trash in separate bags bound for color-coded bins.”
- Bins are everywhere! They are found “on train cars and station platforms, town squares and public parks, schools, even soccer stadiums.” Most bins are labeled in multiple languages, making it easier for tourists to recycle.
- Are Germany, South Korea, and Austria the top recyclers in the world?
- No! Or, at least, it’s unlikely. The study was limited to the 35 members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), whose mission is “to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world.” The OECD is an international organization comprised mostly of industrialized, developed countries; developing nations that both produce little waste and recycle much of it are not included in the study.
TEACHERS TOOLKIT
New York Times: Germany Gleefully Leads List of Top Recyclers
Nat Geo: Go Green! idea list
Nat Geo: Where are People Recycling? MapMaker Interactive map
(extra credit!) OECD: Environment at a Glance 2015—OECD Indicators
Thank you so much sharing your information.