Showing posts with label recyclables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recyclables. Show all posts

What IS stopping us recycling?

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    A lack of storage space or access to recycling sites, confusion over collection days and skepticism about the environmental benefits are just some of the obstacles stopping people recycling more.

    And I would say that the access to recycling sites and the lack of them in fact is the greatest problem here, In addition to that recycling would increase most remarkably, as has been proven elsewhere, when financial incentives are given for recycling, e.g. by being paid for collected drinks cans brought to the recycling centers.

    The government-funded Waste & Resources Action Plan (WRAP) has carried out research investigating the barriers preventing a further rise in household recycling rates – and offering local authorities advice on overcoming them.

    According to WRAP, these barriers can be broken down into four distinct areas, and those are: physical, behavioural, lack of knowledge and attitudes and perceptions.

    On the physical front, people struggle when containers for collecting recycling are unsuitable or there is no space for storage, when collections are unreliable and when they have no way of getting to recycling sites. The latter, in my experience, is one of the greatest inhibitors for people's recycling abilities.

    In addition to that, in the area where I have experience with personally, it takes ages of waiting in line with vehicles to get stuff dropped off at the recycling centers, which are few and far between, and often not easy to get to either. The getting to is even worse when one does not have a motor vehicle at one's disposal and one lives where the curbside recycling units refuse to go.

    Behavioural obstacles, so the study found, include people being too busy, having difficulty with establishing a routine for sorting out recycling or simply if they forgetting to put it out at the right time.

    In many cases people also lack the knowledge of how their scheme, if there is any, works or what materials can be recycled.

    There is often also great confusion, it must be said, at the local authority recycling management level as to what plastics, for instance, are recyclable. I have been told at more than one instance that certain plastic packaging was not recyclable when the manufacturer assures that the packaging is PET.

    Attitudes and perceptions throws up a mixed bag of barriers. There are some people that simply doubt the environmental benefits of recycling, and then there are others who feel that they are not adequately rewarded for doing the right thing and then again others are feel that sorting through waste is dirty.

    Those that feel that they are not adequately rewarded for recycling are, I think, on to a very valid point, and as I mentioned already, in countries where payment is given for material brought in the recycling rates are much higher and there are even people who literally live off gathering up the waste that other people drop, for sale.

    Phillip Ward, Director of Local Government Services at WRAP, said: "Only by addressing these barriers will we get people to recycle more things more often.

    "Good communication about their recycling service is vital but it will not persuade people to use services which are unreliable or too complicated.

    "We believe this research will help local authorities boost their own recycling rates and to build on their existing successes. WRAP will continue to support local authorities in achieving this."

    To the comments of the WRAP representative could be added that, and yes, I do keep on about it, a proper nationwide scheme of rewarding people for bringing in recyclables would make even more of a difference.

    But, while this works in so many other countries, I am sure that we will be told that it just cannot work in Britain, as with so many other good ideas, on the environmental front. Britain, so we are told again and again, is different and while things may work in Germany, the Netherlands or the USA, they could never work here.

    Time to think and rethink, methinks...

    © M Smith (Veshengro), August 2008
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Post Title

What IS stopping us recycling?


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/08/what-is-stopping-us-recycling.html


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Roadside trash becomes loot for thieves

    States, cities crack down on thefts of recyclables

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    Residents in US towns have described that when they put out the garbage and recycling on the curb for pickup that strangers dig through their bins stealing trash they aim to turn into treasure.

    Glass breaks, paper flies - the loot's gone hours before the waste company even arrives.

    Those people are like an army out there, people report. They are in coming in trucks, work with cell phones. To them it is a business.

    Obviously, recycling and the collection of recyclables is a business and while we cannot encourage the behavior described by some residents of those recyclers, those “thieves”, is it not the case that once anything is by the roadside it is public property?

    I do a lot of “roadside shopping” as and when I can, but then my finds are used at home or are turned into resalable goods.

    However, it would appear that taking and removing cans, bottles and other recyclables from bins is illegal in many places, including San Francisco and New York City.

    America never ceases to amaze me in regards of such laws. Much like the fact that it is a felony in many areas to collect rainwater for use in one's garden and such.

    With prices for aluminum, cardboard and newsprint going up and an economic slowdown putting added pressure on people's pocketbooks, curbside refuse has become a hot commodity.

    A truck piled high with mixed recyclables can fetch upward of $1,000; newspapers alone can grab about $600.

    The issue has caught the attention of state and local officials, who are seeking more stringent regulations to curb theft, saying lost revenue threatens the financial viability of their recycling programs.

    Maybe if they actually would have a different system which would get people to bring the recyclables to a collection point where they actually would pay those people that recycle the trouble at the curbside would not happen.

    But, as in so many places elsewhere, such big places seem to want money from things that they did not work for; the city authorities I am referring to here, not anyone else.

    One cannot, obviously condone the theft of “fresh” newspapers, as apparently is happening with the free weekly “The East Bay Express”, which covers Oakland, Berkeley and other Bay Area cities, which are stolen directly from the rack by recyclers by the ton. This is, obvious theft and theft is wrong.

    While still legal in some places – though to a great degree illegal, sort of, in the UK – I am sure that dumpster dicing will be made a felony as well, seeing that often they are full of metal, wood and all other useful items, and recyclables.

    In Britain we are, like, so I understand, also in the USA and other places, we are seeing metals being stolen left, right and center, such as lead from church roofs, copper and lead pipes from public lavatories, and wires and cables from railroad projects and even live cables. The length that those metal thieves go are unbelievable but the prices are high and many of those that buy scrap metals are rouges themselves. If they were honest and the word would get around that no one is buying the material that appears to come from illegal sources then the thefts would go away, of that I am sure.

    Food for thought...

    © M Smith (Veshengro), July 2008

Post Title

Roadside trash becomes loot for thieves


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/07/roadside-trash-becomes-loot-for-thieves.html


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