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107 points

Those weird bulbs are called compact fluorescent lamps or CFLs. They are energy-efficient light bulbs that contain a small amount of mercury, which is toxic to humans and the environment. they should never be thrown away in the household trash.

Your local dump or transfer station will (usually) have an attendant who knows how they deal with them.

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13 points

You can also google your location, lots of places have the information online on a website or app. I think OP is from NJ so

https://ucnj.org/recycling/fluorescent-bulb-recycling/

https://www.nj.gov/dep/dshw/recycling/fluorescent_bulbs.htm

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25 points

Is it worse for the environment than driving 80 minutes round trip to the dump to ask about it?

Genuine question.

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17 points

You can usually call or check out a website rather than driving. Most people save them up, then take them all at once or take them when they are going there anyway with other stuff to dispose of.

Also be really careful if one breaks (get everyone out of the room and air it out first).

https://www.epa.gov/mercury/cleaning-broken-cfl

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7 points
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That’s a great question, thank you! It made me dick (edit: standing by my mistake!) a (tiny) bit deeper. I took a different perspective and the tldr is: Do you want to kill specifics? I.e. local plants, animals, water poisoning, etc - then mercury is the winner!

If you’re after killing via global temperature variation then the car is… Well… Killing it.

But on a serious note: both are bad but depending on how your local trash is handled those small bulbs could actually have an impact, most likely via the water chain.

If those are the two options I had I would just store them like OP. But then again where I live most shops take those back to recycle them properly.

Thanks again for the question, I had a fun few minutes!

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7 points

I hope that second sentence was a typo…

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22 points

Perhaps I’m talking from the European perspective but over here every supermarket and convenience store has a battery and light bulb recycling box. Can’t imagine it’s much different in the US.

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16 points
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I’ve got bad news for you…

Sometimes your place of work might have electronics recycling bins or something, but for the most part you’re expected to go to a special eco centre to recycle large electronics and batteries and stuff like this. Often you even have to pay a fee for them to take these items, which seems incredibly stupid to me because it just encourages everybody to throw them out with the normal trash.

You may find some stores in some places that will take this stuff, but as far as I know this is not commonplace in much of North America. There are also some services where you can pay a fee for somebody to collect an item. We did that for a swollen lithium cell recently.

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6 points

Is it really 80 minutes to the nearest recycling center that’s terrible where do you live?

In Europe you would be hard pushed for it to be 10 minutes.

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3 points

Well round trip so about 40 minutes if it’s rush hour traffic. But that’s to the dump. The closest recycling center is close, but it’s just a bunch of unmanned bins.

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The US is a lot bigger and more spread out than most Europeans seen to imagine

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12 points
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Yes. This is directly bad for your immediate environment. But also, most of the big hardware places like Home Depot accept them.

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4 points

Best Buy accepts electronics recycling too.

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66 points

Gotcha. I guess these will just live in the box with my old batteries forever.

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27 points

I got rid of hundreds of pounds of old batteries at my community electronics recycling event this year. See if your community has one.

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18 points

Your Home Depot probably has a bin for them.

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3 points

There’s barely any recycling infrastructure where I live so to the landfill it’ll go…

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