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Recycling 2017 - Some new recycling opportunities you may not have heard of either


Time to recycle the phone (s)
Feeling rather chuffed today as I have recycled our assorted mobile phones. In this case it isn’t just doing the planet good either. During February, each phone also buys a meal for someone in need from OzHarvest.

Oz Harvest is in the business of recycling too, collecting surplus food from supermarkets and restaurants and redistributing it to the homeless and hungry. Much more could be said on this topic - food waste is in the news, but I will save that for another day.
 
The Mobile Muster is a voluntary industry funded and government approved program to make sure that their products do not end up as landfill. The valuable parts such as metals and mercury are extracted and the plastics are shredded to make new products. Your phone, chargers, batteries and accessories can all be dropped off at your nearest drop point or brought to Australia Post who will mail them for free, or you can download the Reply Paid Label yourself and send it to the recycling facility. While I was looking into this I came upon a number of other new recycling opportunities which are worthwhile sharing. 
Do you have any outdated makeup in your house or handbag? Now there's a way of recycling that too thanks to L'Oreal

Another industry sponsored event, this time by cosmetics manufacturers L’Oréal, Garnier and Maybelline who have teamed up with Terracycle  to recycle unwanted beauty products - you know, that caking foundation, the crusty nail polish, old lipsticks – any brand, not just theirs.  All you do is put them in a box and download the label from the Terracycle website to stick on the front. L'Occitane accepts its own products and packaging via this company too.Terracycle also collects used toothbrushes, tubes of toothpaste, packaging and caps on behalf of Colgate. The bonus is that they will donate two cents to your favourite school or charity for each item that you donate.  They also recycle those Post packs  and Nespresso capsules which are not easily recycled because of their composite nature.There is no charitable donation involved in returning coffee capsules, but thanks to all parties for doing this at no further expense to the long suffering consumer.
Oral Care Products and Packaging are are handled by Terracyle too, courtesy of Colgate

While we are in the bathroom, unused medicines and out of date pharmaceutical products can also be recycled. While that doesn’t earn you any extra brownie points either, it is important both for health and environmental reasons, especially when you can’t even remember what on earth they were originally prescribed for. The RUM project involves taking these items to your local chemist to ensure their safe and responsible disposal.

Hard plastics e.g. your yoghurt tub can usually go into household recycle bins, but not so the soft or scrunchy plastics that come with packets of biscuits, packets of noodles etc. because they clog the processing machinery.They can however be returned to the major stores, along with any plastic shopping bags you may still be harbouring.  This is a free program operated by REDcycle  and backed by major brands. It converts the recovered plastic into things like outdoor furniture and park benches.



On the subject of supermarkets, Aldi now has a drop point for batteries, if you are lucky enough to have an Aldi store near you. Some scout groups and schools collect them too. At this stage we only recycle around 1% of these, compared to say, 85% for cardboard and paper, so this is definitely an area for improvement, especially as they are full of useful but also toxic material – cadmium, mercury and lithium, which become a health hazard in landfill.

Prevention is better than cure. I am replacing any used batteries with rechargeable ones. I already have three different recycling bins and a green bin for green waste, but spare a thought for the Japanese  who have no less than 12!

Halogen lights which I replaced with LEDS. A source of toxic waste or useful materials? It's all up to us


Lamps and fluoro tubes can and should also be recycled (not in your recycle bin), but by dropping them off at one of the places listed here. Ikea stores in Australia and the US have collection boxes for these near the door. If you don’t have an Ikea store in your area, CMA Ecocycle accepts these in prepaid packages at your expense. To get one call them on 1300 32 62 92. Since the recycling rate for these products is also at about 1%  - i.e. pathetic, and they too pose a health risk as well as an environmental risk, hail to those companies which are taking the lead in their end -of -life management. Click here to find out how to clean up a broken mercury light fitting. It's harder than you think and failure to do it correctly may expose you or others to neurotoxins.

Harvey Norman Stores accept old televisions and computers as part of the National TV and Computer Recycling Scheme while the Officeworks chain will collect not only computers but printers and ink cartridges. Cartridges can also be dropped into the boxes at participating Australia Post, Harvey Norman, JB Hi-Fi and Office National stores. You can also apply for a free collection box for your workplace.  In other states, TechCollect  collect and recycle  e-waste. Since it was set up in 2012 TechCollect has recycled more than 80,000 tonnes of e-waste – keeping it off the streets and out of landfill. Consumers can access free and convenient recycling locations across the country.
As well as the service  listed above, Mobile Muster has teamed up with Storage King and ECOACTIV to provide a low cost ($3.50) E-Waste Recycling Box for mobile phones and a range of other small electronics including notebooks, video recorders, CD and DVD players, printers, cameras, MP3 players and gaming devices.
 

There are several ways to recycle glasses
Recycling glasses and spectacles has received some bad press lately for those who look at things only in $$$$ terms, but you only have to read some of the moving comments at the end of that particular post, to appreciate the difference a pair of glasses can make in poorer parts of the world. The Lions Clubs of Australia still collect, sort, clean and deliver thousands of these via their Lions Recycle for Sight Program. If there is a Specsavers* optometrist near you, you can leave your glasses there and they will forward them to the Lions Club. If there isn’t, Lions will give you a Reply Paid Number where you can post them without charge. (A similar program runs in the UK, in which participating optometrists also collect glasses but in this case, only recycle the parts and use the money to support vision programs in Africa). Personally, feel good factor aside, anything that means something will be reused in some way, rather than going to the rubbish tip or consuming yet more resources to make new products, sounds like a good thing to me. If you want to be more directly involved, then send your used glasses to Carenza who takes them to rural villages in India, along with an optometrist. Contact her at
carenza@hotmail.com

If you want to keep other items out of landfill and prefer to personally donate them to someone in need rather than giving them to charity shops, here are three possible avenues.  Gumtree.com.au 
offers free listing of free items, as well as things which you want to sell.
The mission of OzRecycle is “to reduce the number of useful things thrown onto the rubbish pile only to be burnt or buried." You can help by becoming a member, inviting your friends and family, telling your local council and using the Oz Recycle Free Recycle Classifieds  to give away unwanted but sound goods. There is also an Items Wanted category. Any member who is interested in taking your unwanted item will be in contact with you.
Givit has a similar program of matching donors with people in need, but doesn’t require membership.
I read about this scheme which seems very active in Queensland, on an engaging blog called:
http://conversationswithmysister.com.au/start-recycling-and-helping-others/  which also has some other interesting ideas, including the link to Carenza. Most of the other information initially came from The Planet Ark website  Recycling Near You  which has much more advice on where, what and how you can recycle. You can also call their hotline on 1300 733 712.
(The 911 Earth Watch site has information on where and what you can recycle in the USA).


Don’t despair if some of these programs are not /not yet available where you live. Perhaps you or a community group could start one. We also know that Australia’s vast distances and sparse rural population densities can make recycling seem uneconomic and less environmentally friendly, given the extra fuel needed and consequent emissions. Councils also have limited capacity, but where there is a will, ways can usually be found. For instance, if goods can be delivered to outlying areas, then surely recycling could be the back freight, especially if there is a small financial incentive to go with it.

The same excuse does not hold for our cities. Tyre disposal remains a problem, the voluntary industry scheme for return of used plastic oil containers is about to collapse and there is no excuse for continuing to drag our feet with respect to Container Deposit Legislation. South Australia, with its container deposit scheme which it pioneered in 1977, achieves a 76% return rate, compared to less than 50% for the rest of the country, significant in a place which uses 14 billion drink containers annually.What happened when the Northern Territory wanted to do the same, is an absolute disgrace. And could someone please do something about disposable nappies?
 
We can learn from others too.  Many countries, and especially Germany with a 70% recycling rate and Japan with its twelve domestic recycling categories, are way ahead. While the abovementioned efforts at stewardship by corporations are to be applauded, both Germany and Japan are also way ahead when it comes to working with manufacturers to prevent their products ending up as landfill. See for example the Guardian article about what is happening with white goods in Japan where manufacturers achieve a recovery rate of 85% and are working to reduce that even further. All very well for big affluent countries you might say, but tiny Finland with under 6 million people and one of the lowest population densities in Europe is designing new villages with zero waste in mind and expects to recover between 96-98% of its waste. It is probably no coincidence that Finland also  leads in education. Please tell us too if you know of other novel ways to recycle which I haven't mentioned here.

Lastly, noble though it may be to recycle, it is far better to not use so much in the first place. Even recycling consumes energy, raises greenhouse emissions  and uses water and other materials to create new products. Hooray for phone manufacturers seeing the light and unifying their chargers. The same principle could be applied to so many more products."Planned obsolescence" belongs in the dust bin of history along with fur coats and gas guzzling cars with fins. However, the two most important things to take away from this post for the time being are to think before we buy and to think before we heedlessly throw things away. 

P.S. Before I forget, on the subject of prevention being better than cure - when did you last use a phone book and not your smart phone? You can stop having phone books delivered by clicking on this site.

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Now for a small plug for another Specsavers Community Program, though it rightfully belongs in the Australia Day post. As well as raising funds for the Fred Hollows Foundation to restore sight to the needlessly blind, it has provided funds to combat Trachoma, the fourth leading cause of blindness in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities. Australia remains the only developed country which still has this disease which is prevalent in 60% of remote Aboriginal communities.






                                                                                                                                                                                                        



Comments

Shea said…
Hi Roni,

What a great post full of such useful information. Thank you so much for getting in contact and letting me know you have linked to my page - what an honour. It is so inspiring to see the community of environmental bloggers growing. Together we really can have a positive impact on our planet. X Shea