In my opinion if the council has recycling targets to meet it should do the work and take away a single bin and sort out the stuff at its depot - that is what should be mandatory.
Perhaps The Councils should reward people who correctly recycle their rubbish by penalising those who don't.
A problem touched upon briefly is the inconsistency around the Country on the items that can actually be recycled and into what.
A Nationwide Standardised Policy would simplify things and lead to higher compliance in my view.
A few years ago some councils introduced bins with microchips, in allowing them to weigh each bin. Meaning they could charge residents different amounts, depending on how much of their waster went into landfill. But then there was a hysterical tabloid campaign against "wheelie-bin spies"... :roll:Perhaps The Councils should reward people who correctly recycle their rubbish by penalising those who don't.![]()
Milton Keynes Council provide us with the following:
1 x Green wheelie bin for garden waste ( used as and when but not often)
1x blue box for glass ( used all the time by us)
1x tiny green bin for food waste - never used.
1x small thick plastic sack for batteries - in the shed used for something else!
1x thick sack for paper - in the shed used for something else!
1x roll bin bags - v useful but they seem to have stopped this.
1x roll pink plastic sacks for general recycling. Used loads ( you simply ask for more at no cost when you run out!)
I put everything plastic in the pink sack, regardless of any instructions, paper, card, tin, foil,textiles, shoes.
We get through several sacks per week and about 1 bin bags we try to recycle everything else.
The council dont provide us with wheelie bins and so will take however many bags you pile at the kerb, but i like to try and get most in the pink sack. The same wagon picks up waste and recycling once a week.
it is a pretty good system
A lot of councils provide a single mixed-use recycling bin. The problem with this approach is a lot of the recyclables become contaminated and consequently unrecyclable - paper can become 'dirty' through bits of beverage left inside cans or glass bottles etc and other forms of contamination. Sorting recycling by type significantly reduces this contamination, even if it is slightly less convenient. Around 20% of all recyclable objects placed in a recycling bin ends up in landfill through being too 'dirty' to recycle and sorting recyclables helps to mitigate this.
I think that is one of the reasons cited by my local council...the amount of contaminated recycleable waste they are collecting in the 'silver' bin.Co-mingling as it is known isn't ideal, as the processors pay a low price as you say due to the quality, but it vastly reduces the costs of pre-sorting as you don't have to employ people to do it.
I've noticed that at the supermarkets that I use, the former skips where you placed one recyclate (i.e. cans, the three types of coloured glass, paper etc.) have been replaced by two or three mixed use bins.
One of the best ideas would be to bring back the returnable bottle.
Wish we would do this in the UK as well, seems to have spawned a bit of a "cottage industry" in Germany as it is not unusual to see people armed with large bags rummaging around in bins who could not be described as tramps either. Just don't get in a queue behind one of them when they go to "cash in" their haul!Maybe Worth putting a deposit on glass/plastic bottles. Say 25p or 50p
This is the case in Germany, with the Pfand system - supermarkets have machines for collecting bottles, automatically sorting for recycling (the bottles are marked with a barcode indicating their deposit and which bin the machine needs to put them into). The machine then issues a voucher for money off the shop or cash from the till.