Biodegradable wrote: » I mean what if I were to shove a load of plastic wrapping from biscuits into a milk bottle. They'd never know. Would they?
salonfire wrote: » Lol at people thinking their recycling bins are recycled. You know what the material in recycling bins is good at? Burning. That's why it is mostly all sent to incineration.
salonfire wrote: That's why it is mostly all sent to incineration.
Wanderer78 wrote: » Is this a fact or.....
kneemos wrote: » 95% of it went to China until they stopped taking it a few years ago. God knows where it ends up now.
Wanderer78 wrote: » do we actually have concrete facts on all these 'facts'? im not living in some utopia thinking all our recyclables are actually recycled, but....
Ragnar Lothbrok wrote: » Threads like these really upset me! I've spent years now carefully separating all my rubbish and trying to convince my son to do the same (he still fecks soft plastic wrappers into the recycling bin :mad:) Two of the son's friends started work for a waste collection company after they left school and they used to laugh at me for going to the trouble of recycling as they assured me that not one f*ck was given by the collection company, the vast majority got thrown into the same pile. It still makes me feel good about myself to recycle though, even when I think about the zero effect I'm having on the environment.
kneemos wrote: » Paper and metals have a good turnaround. A lot of plastic just isn't recyclable or not economical. We should by right be looking after it ourselves,not sending it abroad to end up in the environment.
Recycling aluminium takes 95% less energy than producing it from its raw materials. The recycling process also generates only 5% of the greenhouse gas emissions.
zom wrote: » We are unable to recycle gigantic wind turbines - so how could we manage millions of small wrappings???
Ragnar Lothbrok wrote: » ....It still makes me feel good about myself to recycle though, even when I think about the zero effect I'm having on the environment.
kneemos wrote: » We should by right be looking after it ourselves,not sending it abroad to end up in the environment.
Biodegradable wrote: » You mean to end up in recycling plants abroad? Or do the Chinese just dump it in the sea?
kneemos wrote: » A lot of it does get incinerated here and used in cement plants apparently.
Padre_Pio wrote: » Plastic recyclers wanted milk bottle manufacturers to stop putting blue and green lids on bottles, cause they have to be manually removed, but consumers didn't like it, so it wasn't done.
Biodegradable wrote: » kneemos wrote: » We should by right be looking after it ourselves,not sending it abroad to end up in the environment. You mean to end up in recycling plants abroad? Or do the Chinese just dump it in the sea?
Biodegradable wrote: » Cement plants? How does that work? Do they grind it up and mix it cement so that the end result is a 1 in 20 mixture of plastic?