Plastic Recycling Archives - Page 18 of 28 - Plastic Waste Solutions
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Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek grants exemption for some household plastic waste to be exported – Australia
Posted on May 21, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSome household plastic waste will be exported overseas, instead of being recycled onshore, after the Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek grants a "temporary" exemption to exporters from a plastic export ban. Source: Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek grants exemption for some...
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Without enough recycling facilities in Australia, some are getting creative with plastic solutions
Posted on May 21, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource With a flick of the wrist, you've removed the plastic lid from your water bottle. How much thought did you give to this small, round piece of plastic that keeps your drink contained in the bottle? Despite being a hard plastic,...
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AWRE 2023 set to provide a wake-up call for Australia
Posted on May 17, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource Despite the urgency for change in Australia’s resource recovery system, the 2022 National Waste Report showed that the nation is moving backwards. The national waste plan aims to reduce the total waste generated by 10 per cent per person by 2030, however...
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AFGC says 100,000+ households ready to join NPRS – Australia
Posted on May 14, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource The Australian Food & Grocery Council’s (AFGC) CEO Tanya Barden has called for urgent solutions to soft plastics recycling in Australia. “The REDcycle scheme was ambitious and well-intended, but the initiative relied heavily on the public’s willingness to return their...
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Waste myth: “Landfill levies don’t work” – Australia
Posted on May 14, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource The graph above clearly shows that the per capita waste to landfill has decreased in direct proportion to the rise in State landfill levies. There is noise in the data and a lag between rising levies and behaviour change...
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Finding a better way to recycle plastic film – USA
Posted on May 12, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource Recycling of flexible film and packaging, despite its growing use, is significantly less than what takes place with rigid plastics. And most MRFs, typically run by trash collection companies or municipalities, do not have the equipment to effectively sort...
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Recycling giant Waste Management sees future in film recovery – USA
Posted on May 12, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource Plastics are just a small fraction of the recyclables collected and processed by Waste Management Inc., and film is just a small fraction of those plastics. But plastics, including film, have value, and...
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Plastics recycling inching forward – USA
Posted on May 12, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic Recycling -

AFGC takes on soft plastics recycling – Australia
Posted on May 11, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource The National Plastics Recycling Scheme (NPRS), being developed by AFGC, the peak body representing food, beverage and grocery manufacturers, is a product stewardship scheme aimed at creating a circular loop for soft plastics, starting with kerbside collection...
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APR defends radio ads promoting plastics recycling – USA
Posted on May 10, 2023 by DrRossH in Plastic RecyclingSource An anti-plastics group has reached out to National Public Radio to protest advertising from the Association of Plastic Recyclers. But APR said the ad campaign, which included buys in select markets and on national programming, just recently concluded. The conflict between...
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How many people today grab a takeaway coffee cup from the local cafe to drink on the go? We don’t know, but the number must be enormous.. Most every one of the above have a plastic top that will last 100s of years. Some cafes still use plastic cups that last a similar time. Is 10 minutes of coffee worth 100s of years of trash?
These items can be seen littering our gutters and on our streets all over the place. If they were all cardboard, they would still be littered, but they would, at least, be gone in a short time.
They do not need to be made of plastic.
On the way home from the gym last week, a distance of about 1 km (1/2 mile), I counted the items of plastic litter on the curb as I walked. In that short distance I counted 63 pieces of plastic litter. Plastic drink bottles, bottle tops, candy wrappers, plastic film, polystyrene fragments etc. That seemed to be a lot to me. I guess it is a generational thing. Our parents would have been horrified to see that amount, whereas it seems to go unnoticed by our youth of today. In another 20 years how many pieces will there be on this stretch, -- 200? What will today’s youth think of that new amount then when they are older? Will their children be so readily accepting of a higher amount of litter?