Showing posts with label recycling centers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycling centers. 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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People Turn To Recycling For Extra Money

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    One economist said the economy is gasping for air, but has yet to collapse.

    While the debate continues about whether or not the USA (and the UK) are in a recession many are already struggling and trying to find new ways to make a few extra bucks.

    Many people say they are having a hard time paying bills and putting food on the table and some say they are recycling for the extra money which also helps the environment.

    More and more people are recycling in a time when the economy is slow, which can be seen by the amount of people that visit recycling centers in the various cities and towns, small towns even, in the United States.

    There everything can be sold back for recycling, even squashed up soda and beer cans, as long as they are made of aluminium, glass bottles, metal of all kinds, and much more.

    “In this day in time with gas prices being so high, four dollars a gallon for gas and groceries being at an all time high milk eggs meat...you got to do what you got to do to survive,” remayked the manager of one recycling center.

    He also stated that on average he gets seventy to a hundred customers a day and some days even more. People are bringing in household items like old Christmas tree stands and toasters to recycle for extra cash.

    Someone from a different region reported that last month he took his six month inventory of cans over to the scrapping place and that he had to wait for 2 hours just to get in the door. He added that he could remember just a year ago driving in and being the only person there. Now, all one can say to that is that times are definitely changing, once again.

    Recycling, in the USA, is good for the pocketbook as well as for the environment. Shame that we have not cottoned on to this as yet in Britain.

    I am sure that no council would have to force people to recycle by various taxes and threats but that they would have queues of miles by people wanting to sell back to them the various recyclables and, like in the USA, I am sure that there would be many kids that would go out, trash bag in hand (and maybe even litter picker), and collect those soda and beer cans that maybe, just maybe, still end up in the litter or just thrown into road or the countryside.

    In the USA is is often common for most customers to walk away from the recycling centers with more than one hundred dollars in their pocket.

    I am sure it is time that other countries took a leaf out of that book and applied the same, Britain for starters.

    © M Smith (Veshengro), June 2008

Post Title

People Turn To Recycling For Extra Money


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/06/people-turn-to-recycling-for-extra.html


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