Archive for the ‘Recycling’ Category

Hank the singing bottle takes on Arnie in glass recycling campaign

hankThe glass sector has a new foot soldier in the battle to promote recycling in the form of Hank, ‘the singing bottle’. FEVE has developed Hank to appear in cartoon adventures about glass recycling using the ‘I’ll be back’ line made famous by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 1980s movie, The Terminator.

The cartoons will form part of a Friends of Glass marketing and social networking campaign used across the continent and will be translated into 14 European languages. Nearly eleven million tonnes, or 62%, of container glass was collected for recycling in 2007, and FEVE hopes the campaign will help focus on the remaining 38%.

Hank can be viewed via YouTube or visit www.friendsofglass.com

Kerbside sorting favoured over commingled according to WRAP Report

“Quality is important because it affects the uses the material can be put to. Quality materials can be easily reused in ways which give the most benefit to the environment.”

Sorting household recycling at the kerbside is the “best and cheapest option in most cases”, the Waste & Resources Action Programme concludes in a major report looking at the various ways of collecting household recycling launched on June 9th.

Drawing on its latest research the Report claims that fully commingled collections for recyclables have “cost and quality disadvantages” which should “limit their use except where other options are not suitable”.

wrapWRAP argues the evidence is clear that the quality of the materials recovered for recycling is affected by the way they are collected. It states: “Quality is important because it affects the uses the material can be put to. Quality materials can be easily reused in ways which give the most benefit to the environment.”

“Kerbside sorted materials are consistently good quality with less than 1% being rejected,” it continues. ”Commingled collections are subject to higher contamination rates and have higher levels of rejection.”

“Our research indicates that 87% who have to separate recyclables into different containers say they do not mind doing this. Commingled collections should only be used where no other system would work.

WRAP is advising local authorities who are reviewing their arrangements to base their choices on four considerations:

  • Quality of materials
  • Cost Efficiency
  • Cost Effectiveness
  • Public acceptability

In its leaflet, WRAP said that it believes that this latest information will help local authorities make informed decisions about the type of collection service they choose.

UK Glass recycling exceeds expectations

Figures from the National Packaging Waste Database showed that the UK recycled 1,613,000 tonnes of packaging glass – an increase of around 150,000 tonnes in twelve months. The result of this success is that the UK has successfully met the EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive of 60%, says British Glass Manufacturers’ Confederation.

Commenting on these figures Rebecca Cocking, Recycling Manager for British Glass said, “The news is good for the UK as a whole, but the UK glass container sector saw a further decline in the amount of glass returned to remelt. This is, unfortunately, because quality and availability is deteriorating due to the nature in which glass is collected by Local Authorities and Waste Management Companies who are focusing on glass as a waste and not a resource.

The UK glass container industry could use double the amount of good quality recycled glass cullet if it was available. Of the 1,613,000 tonnes of glass recycled in the UK only 665,561 tonnes was returned to UK glass manufacturers for remelt – the worst performance since 2004.”