The best way to recycle ...

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The best way to recycle ...

Published by phil hurst for Campaign for Real Recycling in Environment and also in Local Government
Wednesday 11th November 2009 - 12:04pm

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Kerbside sort -no need for expensive wheelie bins. Kerbside sort -no need for expensive wheelie bins.

More from Campaign 4 Real Recycling

What is the best way to recycle? 

The government chief advisors on recycling, the Waste Recycling Action Programme (WRAP) recently published definitive guidance on the best way to recycle.

"On the evidence available to WRAP, our view is that kerbside sort systems offer reliable material quality and lower net costs for council taxpayers. They are also capable of capturing the same volume of material as co-mingled schemes.

There is no evidence that their operation – properly explained and justified – is unacceptable to householders and the physical evidence of sorting of materials happening at the kerbside is reassuring to sceptical residents.

There appear to be no unmanageable health and safety considerations.

Because of our priority for quality materials as a way to improve resource efficiency, WRAP believes that kerbside sort collections should be preferred where they are practical and that should be in the majority of local authority areas.

Where there are practical and operational barriers to kerbside sorting, two stream co-mingled collections have significant advantages over single stream collections, mainly through improved material quality and value as a result of keeping paper and card separate from other materials, particularly glass."
 

Kerbside sorting is where two containers are given to the household and the materials collected are sorted at the kerbside. This  saves expensive sorting costs, maximises the recyclability of the materials collected, and minimises waste budgets.

The full report can be found on the campaign for real recycling website:  www.realrecycling.org.uk and the WRAP website www.wrap.org.uk

Comments

Jaef

Commented 117 weeks ago

"Targeted" recycling is pertinent to this post. For example, as far as I know residents around here have to travel to a recycling centre to recycle batteries, ie AA-, AAA- etc type batteries. For me that entails a journey of say, 1.5 miles.

Small bins for the waste batteries placed in the supermarket, library etc would reduce carbon emissions of motorised travel and be much more encouraging of recycling for residents.

phil hurst

Commented 117 weeks ago

Jaef makes a good point about flexibility in recycling collection systems. Batteries are a real pain if mixed in with other materials, they are small and will tend to get through mechanical sorting machinery and end up in bales of ‘paper’ or piles of glass. If they get crushed they leak - and you don't want those chemicals all over your other materials.
The wider the variety of materials you put in one container the harder it is to sort them out. People want to recycle more - their main complaint these days is not "I don't want to recycle' but; "why can’t I recycle this?" If you use a system that mixes all the materials in one container then things like batteries and plastic bags are always going to cause you problems – you will have to keep telling people, sorry, we cant recycle that. Our Tip – design a collection system that is flexible and can be easily expanded to take other materials.

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