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Recycling and reuse programs

  • Ink cartridges

    How to recycle your empty office ink cartridges:

    1. Write empty on your empty ink cartridges; if they come with a shipping label, stick the label on the outside.
    2. Send them to Shipping/receiving through inter-office mail.

    It's as easy as that.

    All empty ink cartridges are sent back to the company from which they came (e.g. Ricoh, Lexmark). Personal desk printer ink cartridges will be collected together and properly recycled.

  • Pens and markers

    Pen Recycling Program

    Every time you use up a writing instrument, be sure to save it and bring it to a pen recycling box on campus. We send collected waste to Terracycle, a company that collects previously non-recyclable or difficult-to-recycle waste. The waste is converted into new products, ranging from recycled park benches to upcycled backpacks.

    Accepted waste:

    Any brand of:

    • highlighters and highlighter caps
    • markers and marker caps
    • mechanical pencils
    • pens and pen caps
    • permanent markers and permanent marker caps

    Locations of collection bins:

    • Campus Corners, second and third floor
    • Education Library (11 Simcoe Street North) – Kate Gibbings, ext. 2976
    • Information Technology Service Desk
    • North Oshawa Library – Karin Downie, ext. 2967
    • Social Science Library (Charles Hall) – Chelsie Lalonde, ext. 5651
    • South Hall Residence
    • South Village Residence
  • Battery recycling

    Recycle used batteries on campus:

    North Oshawa location:

    • North Oshawa Library
    • South Village Residence Lobby

    Downtown Oshawa locations:

    •  Education Library
    • Social Science Library

    We encourage faculty, staff and students to take their used alkaline (single-use) and rechargeable batteries to one of the convenient drop-off locations. All types of batteries are accepted, including AAA, AA, C, D, 9 volt, lithium, NiCad, NiMH, etc. 

    Where do they go?

    Batteries collected through this program are responsibly recycled by Raw Materials Company (RMC). Did you know that 90 per cent of a battery's components can be recycled!? When you send used batteries to RMC, the steel, earth elements (zinc, manganese, potassium, etc.) and paper and plastic in the batteries are recovered, diverted and reused.

    Why does it matter?

    Recovered materials are used to make new products, saving our earth's finite resources and the energy needed to mine them from ore. Keeping batteries out of landfills diverts potentially harmful materials from our soils and waterways. 

  • Lamps and light bulbs

    One hundred per cent of the incandescent light bulbs used on campus have been phased out to light-emitting diode (LED) light fixtures. LED is a more efficient lighting option, a reduction of approximately 85 kilowatts of demand.

    All used lamps are properly recycled by a certified third-party processing and recycling company. This process allowed the university to divert approximately 190 kg of glass, metals, phosphor, mercury, porcelain and plastic from landfill, while improving campus efficiency.

  • Electronic waste (e-waste) program

    E-waste is the fastest-growing waste stream on the planet. Although it represents two per cent of trash in landfills, it equals 70 per cent of overall toxic waste.

    At Ontario Tech, we're doing our part to recycle e-waste responsibly.

    E-waste

    Contact

    Information to include

    Asset-tagged e-waste

    servicedesk@dc-ot.ca

    • asset tag information
    • e-waste description
    • pickup location

    All other e-waste

    servicedesk@dc-ot.ca

    • e-waste description
    • pickup location

    Did you know?

    A portion of campus e-waste helps fund the university's Engineers Without Borders (EWB) Junior Fellowship Program. Any waste that is of low or no value goes to EWB, whose service provider, Ontario Electronic Stewardship, pays EWB based on the weight of waste.

    Accepted electronics

    • audio and video players and recorders (eg. MP3, cassette, digital)
    • cameras (web, digital, analogue)
    • cellular phones and pagers
    • computer peripherals (keyboards, mice, hard drives, optical drives – CD, Blueray, DVD, HD-DVD)
    • computer peripherals including modems
    • desktop computers
    • desktop printing devices including desktop copiers and multi-function devices
    • equalizers/(pre)amplifiers
    • floor-standing printing devices including printers, photocopiers, multi-function devices
    • monitors
    • PDAs
    • personal handheld computers
    • portable computers
    • radios
    • receivers
    • scanners, typewriters
    • speakers
    • telephones and answering machines
    • televisions
    • turntables
    • video players/projectors, digital frames
    • video recorders

    Do not include cardboard, paper, plastics or hazardous waste.


To learn more about how to recycle or reuse items on campus, contact sustainability@ontariotechu.ca or call ext. 6246.