Keep your family and water
safe from mercury...

Recycle fluorescent tubes and compact fluorescent light bulbs at your local household hazardous waste facility and participating drop-off sites.

     

Fluorescent lamps save energy!!

Compared to standard incandescent lamps, fluorescent lamps can reduce energy consumption by 50% and lighting costs by 30-38 percent.  Fluorescent lamps last, on an average, 10 times longer than conventional lamps.

Fluorescent lamps contain mercury, so dispose of them correctly.

Improper lamp disposal is a human health and water pollution problem, because lamps broken in landfills or at home release mercury - a potent neurotoxin. Dispose of used fluorescent lamps at your local household hazardous waste collection centers. These centers send fluorescent lamps to specialized recycling facilities where the mercury in them is recovered for reuse, rather than escaping into the environment and polluting our water.

Where to take used fluorescent lamps:

Household Hazardous Waste events:
(bring fluorescent lamps and other hazardous waste)

  • Santa Clara County residents (not including Palo Alto residents) can dispose of their used fluorescent lamps at facilities operated by Santa Clara County’s Household Hazardous Waste Collection Program. For more information call  (408) 299-7300 or visit www.hhw.org
     

  • Palo Alto residents can take their used fluorescent lamps to monthly household hazardous waste events at the Regional Water Quality Control Plant. For more information call (650) 496-6980 or visit http://www.cityofpaloalto.org/depts/pwd/news/details.asp?NewsID=352&TargetID=181 

  • Daily drop-off options:

    How else can you help reduce mercury pollution?
     

    Buy low-mercury fluorescent lamps - Major lighting manufacturers now produce lamps with approximately 80 percent less mercury than standard fluorescent lamps.
    • Philips “Alto”

    • GE “Ecolux”

    • Sylvania “Ecologic”

    However, since none of these lamps are completely mercury-free, they should also be disposed of at local household hazardous waste collection centers
     

    Replace mercury fever thermometers with non-mercury digital or glass gallium-indium-tin (galinstan) thermometers - The standards of accuracy for non-mercury thermometers are the same as those for mercury thermometers.
     
    Recycle mercury containing thermometers, thermostats, and batteries - Because mercury is a good conductor of electricity and is the only metal that is liquid at room temperature, it is used in household products like thermometers, thermostats, batteries, and pre-1997 light-up sneakers. All of these are accepted at local household hazardous waste collection centers and should be turned in there.


    What should you do if a mercury-containing product breaks in your home?

    If you spill mercury in your home, turn off the heating or air conditioning and ventilate the room to the outdoors. Avoid touching the mercury with your bare hands and do not vacuum the spill. Using a medicine dropper, collect the mercury and place the mercury and the dropper in an airtight container. Take the mercury to your local household hazardous waste facility or collection event.

    For more information on mercury visit:

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  • Mercury is a potent nerve toxin and can affect the brain and nervous systems. Pregnant women and young children are most susceptible to mercury poisoning. It can also affect fetal development, causing birth defects.
     

  • Mercury released into the environment is transported by air, rain, snow or runoff and deposited in our creeks and Bay. Bacteria convert it into a form that is easily absorbed by microscopic animals and plants, which in turn are consumed by larger animals. You can get exposed to mercury by consuming mercury-contaminated fish.
     

  • The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has issued a nationwide consumer advisory that children and nursing mothers should not eat shark, swordfish, king mackerel, or ocean whitefish because of mercury contamination.
     

  • Each year, broken and landfilled fluorescent lamps in the Bay Area release enough mercury vapors to contaminate a water body almost as big as Lake Tahoe.
     

  • Due to the San Francisco Bay mercury contamination, it is recommended that adults eat no more than two servings of fish from the Bay per month.
     

  • Five of California's largest grocery retailers have begun displaying signs cautioning consumers about the dangers of mercury in fish. The signs, hung near fish counters, advise women and children to not eat swordfish and shark, and to limit consumption of fresh tuna.
     

  • Mercury harms aquatic life too. Information from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service indicates that mercury in sediment may cause increased mortality and deformities of rainbow trout embryos.