U+267B, ♻
BLACK UNIVERSAL RECYCLING SYMBOL

[U+267A]
Miscellaneous Symbols
[U+267C]

Translingual

The symbol on trashcans in Singapore

Alternative forms

Symbol origin

Designed by American graphic designer and architect Gary Anderson in 1970 for a competition held by the Container Corporation of America. It was chosen as the universal symbol for recycling out of 500 other entries on 22 April that year by a panel of graphic designers.[1][2]

Description

Three arrows in a triangular configuration turning clockwise in convergence towards each other through a tilting motion—originally making the arrows form a Möbius strip, though some variants of the symbol do not observe this arrangement—to represent a continuous loop.[3]

Symbol

  1. The recycling symbol: the universal symbol for recycling, filled in.
    • 2022 June 22, United Nations, Twitter:
      Reduce your food waste 🍝
      Recycle
      Plant a tree 🌳

      Your everyday choices can help tackle the climate crisis!


Presentations of ♻
Text
style
Emoji
style
Note: Character's appearance
may be different on each system.
Text style is forced with ︎
and emoji style with ️

Usage notes

See also

References

  1. Penny Jones, Jerry Powell (1999 May) “Gary Anderson has been found!”, in Resource Recycling
  2. BBC World Service (2023 April 11) “The universal recycling symbol”, in Witness History, BBC:[audio description] In 1970, American architecture student Gary Anderson won a competition, to mark the first Earth Day on 22 April, to design a logo for recycled paper products.
  3. Michael Everson and Asmus Freytag (2001 April 2) Background information on Recycling Symbols, International Organization for Standardization, International Electrotechnical Commission, page 6
  4. International Organization for Standardization (2023 February) “Public information symbols”, in ISO 7001:2023: Graphical symbols — Registered public information symbols, 4 edition
  5. “♻️ Recycling Symbol”, in Emojipedia, n.d., Emoji Designs
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