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Recycle! Positive Comments Welcome


ETLerwick
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I honestly feel that if Coca Cola, and all the rest, place their products into millions of plastic bottles then, they should have to pay a levy for each bottle they use, and that the levy should then be used to properly dispose of the used items.  Start at the source/top, it's much more efficient !

Same for the massive amounts of coffee shops and their plastic cups and anyone else who contributes to "industrial scale" waste.

The money raised should then be used to set up proper recycling facilities and to try and educate the morons who seem to dump their rubbish anywhere and everywhere.

Nobody is perfect, Colin. Unfortunately, it is the common man that chucks his empty cans of Coca Cola anywhere and everywhere, not the man that got it ready to be marketed. Not just the cans but the bottles as well, regardless. Bottles of milk are plastic and have been for a while now. What is done about the plastic bottles of Shetland milk? An awful lot of it gets blown around Shetland before it lands in the Atlantic, and that doesn't happen until the common man has bought the plastic bottle of milk. Then the milk or juice, washing-up liquid, shampoo or a million and one other things is used and thrown away when the bottle is empty. The Scottish government has done what it can to try and recover the rubbish that Joe Public throws away willy nilly. Strange, because the farmer that bottles his milk never throws it all in the gutter when it's empty. It's the person that buys it that does that. Joe Public often does the same with every different plastic bottle that Tesco or whoever sells to the idiots that are too lazy.

 

Must think about where I can throw the empty plastic bottle of engine oil, because that's what the gallon of engine oil is now carried in,  now that half a gallon of it has been poured all over the engine and has then dripped all over the street, in the vain hope that half a pint will dribble into the sump. Just like cans and bottles of coke - and all the rest.

 

Does make me think about one thing that you mentioned, the fact that the manufacturers, wholesalers and retailers make no effort to recover the tins and bottles etc. Makes me wonder, how many purchasers would bother to take them back?

Edited by George.
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  • 3 weeks later...

> There must be a far more regular and mundane 'explanation'.

 

I'm sure if there is one, someone will no doubt mention it in public so we are all kept up to speed on the issue.

 

I think they call it PR or something like that.

 

 

We might even be able to help out, if somehow they are being overcharged for something that one of us happens to know where they can get it cheaper, as I know how overstreached purchasing departments in the civil service/etc. can be, they need every helping hand they can get to cut costs.
 

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  • 2 weeks later...

Meanwhile, elsewhere in the developed world where things aren't so backwards, an island resort has been created from the ash from an incinerator and it doubles as a nature park.  It's a tourist attraction just off Singapore.  Singapore reports that they still have a problem with plastics due to the increased use.  Other countries outside the EU are also using incinerators.

 

Want to curb the use of plastics?  Don't recycle them but force manufacturers to use other packaging materials.

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SIBC headline....

 

 

Of all the waste in Shetland only 22 per cent goes to landfill, the second best of all 32 local authority areas of Scotland, and half the percentage for the whole of Scotland, which is 45 per cent.

 

So, we're second from the top of the table for least waste going in to landfill, but apparently we're also high on the league table for not 'recycling'.

 

A rather curious anomaly that..... We don't landfill it, but we don't recycle it, so what do we do with it.

 

Oh, yeah. We 'recycle' it in to used heat, but Holyrood doesn't have a box to tick for that scenario. So, instead of creating a box and ticking it, we have to change our 'recycling' method from one that makes sense and does work for our circumstances, to a complete waste of time and resources so that we can tick one of the 'recycle' boxes they do have, regardless if it consumes a considerable additional un-necessary amount of non-renewable resources to achieve.

 

Holyrood 'one-size-fits-all' - 1.

 

Island proofing & common sense - 0.

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SIBC headline....

 

 

 

 

 

Of all the waste in Shetland only 22 per cent goes to landfill, the second best of all 32 local authority areas of Scotland, and half the percentage for the whole of Scotland, which is 45 per cent.

 

So, we're second from the top of the table for least waste going in to landfill, but apparently we're also high on the league table for not 'recycling'.

 

A rather curious anomaly that..... We don't landfill it, but we don't recycle it, so what do we do with it.

 

Oh, yeah. We 'recycle' it in to used heat, but Holyrood doesn't have a box to tick for that scenario. So, instead of creating a box and ticking it, we have to change our 'recycling' method from one that makes sense and does work for our circumstances, to a complete waste of time and resources so that we can tick one of the 'recycle' boxes they do have, regardless if it consumes a considerable additional un-necessary amount of non-renewable resources to achieve.

 

Holyrood 'one-size-fits-all' - 1.

 

Island proofing & common sense - 0.

Burning waste in an incinerator isn't classed as recycling even though it produces energy. It's got nothing to do with Holyrood box ticking.

Some experts say the increased use of market-driven incinerators that constantly need to be fed have a negative effect on the amount of waste getting recycled.

Edited by Capeesh
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^^^ There's not a country in the world that says incineration is recycling, (even when it's converted into usable energy),

Trying to imply that it's only Holyrood and the SIC that says so is a bit far fetched.

Waste to energy incineration is definitely better than landfill, at least we get something useful out of it, but most developed countries try and take out the reusable materials first.

Edited by Capeesh
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^^^ In 2016 before the import ban China bought around two thirds of the worlds plastic waste, a few more sea hours than a trip from Lerwick to mainland Scotland or mainland Europe for that matter.

Sweden has to import waste to keep their revolutionary recycling plants going, can we not try and emulate the Swedes, save the world and increase local employment at the same time?

Seems logical to me.

Recycling our crap is giving local people jobs, it's actually feeding a few of our neighbours families.

Hooray for recycling!!!

Edited by Capeesh
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^^^ There's not a country in the world that says incineration is recycling, (even when it's converted into usable energy),

Trying to imply that it's only Holyrood and the SIC that says so is a bit far fetched.

Waste to energy incineration is definitely better than landfill, at least we get something useful out of it, but most developed countries try and take out the reusable materials first.

 

I'm not implying that its only the SIC and Holyrood that says so, I'm stating that that's where the chain of blame starts as far as we're concerned and where we need to start addressing the problem. Whoever is higher up the totem pressuring them, in turn is their problem to address.

 

Taking reusable materials out prior to incineration is fine and well, but when you have, as we do, a relatively miniscule amount of reusable materials, which are already being reused productively, and need to be transported a significant distance to be reused again for their original purpose, you quickly cross the line where you use more non-renewable resources transporting/replacing the material to be reused than you'd use to create the same amount of that material from raw materials. Once that line is crossed you start creating additional un-necessary damage to the finite non-renewable resource you have and/or additional un-necessary environmental damage/additional un-necessary carbon footprint.

 

'Recycling' and 'Environmentally Friendly/Green' are not interchangable terms, and most definitely are not necessarily the same thing. They can be is some circumstances, but in others they're most definitely not. Sending a modern ultra fuel efficient sizeable ocean going vessel fully laden with thousands of tons of plastic to dock at a quayside facility that processes and remanufacturers plastic products on a single site, is a wholly different potentially viable outcome to 'recycling' than a few tonnes at a time on a gas guzzling old heap of a north boat for onward haulage by road/rail for several hundred miles.

Edited by Ghostrider
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"Want to curb the use of plastics?  Don't recycle them but force manufacturers to use other packaging materials."

 

How about just leaving the oil where it is ?

 

Seems to me that, once extracted, the "genie is out of the bottle" and, you can't get it back in.

 

I've heard much worse plans.....

 

In the last 30-35 years, broadly speaking, we've gone from using plastics in applications where they were the best material for the job, to a present day default of using plastics for any and every job where they can possibly be applied.

 

Plastics are by far the most problematic material to process and dispose of that are prevalent in day to day refuse, so it should have been both predictable and obvious to those charged with waste disposal that the steep increase in plastics usage in recent decades had only one very predictable outcome.

 

Plastics usage, like everything else is bottom line driven by industry. Whatever material costs least, will be their material of choice, and at the moment thats apparently plastics, If Governments were serious about 'recycling', the environment etc, there is a very simple solution they could apply. Tax plastics usage high enough to make it no longer the material to deliver the most profitable bottom line and its usage would decline dramatically. They'd have a good case for doing so too, arguing it was to cove rthe cost to them of disposing of plastics when they reached end of life.

 

It wouldn't take much tax to do in many cases, Johnson & Johnson managed to stop using plastic for the stems of cottom buds and use paper instead after consumer pressure, at no difference in price to the end product, in some shops at least. Where price hikes were inevitable to the consumer from teh alternative materials/transport costs created, so what, the longer manufacturers are allowed to create plastics in any quantity with impunity the greater the clean up and disposal costs are going to be to everyone else, so we'll all pay the same in the end. The only unanswered question at the moment is will it be higher cost consumer products, or higher taxes.

Edited by Ghostrider
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