The Northamptonshire Government recently published a " Joint Municipal Waste Management Strategy" The 2008 edition is an adopted version of the 2002 copy.
Northampton Borough Council currently collect two bins of recycling: a green one for paper and cardboard and a blue one for plastic, cans and foil. They also collect household waste in a black bin and have a brown bin at some houses for garden waste. Why do they not collect glass? Well they are just about to introduce it after a very succesful trial at the end of Sept 2008, which collected 100 tonnes of glass in five months. Compared to many other authorities Northamptonshire is doing very well with targets, but this doesn't mean they can't improve. By collecting glass they could increase the amount collected for recycling dramatically. It is good that they have started to collect garden waste, but out of 660,000 homes only 60,000 have garden waste collected. That's less than under 10%! Glass, like the garden waste, is only being done to a small percentage of households (Just 86,000)
Recycling is a major part of British life at the moment, with supermarkets rewarding you for re-using your own shopping bags, charging you for using plastic bags, and some authorities giving out rewards for recycling correctly. If enough people sre given the motivation to start and continue, recycling figures could be dramatically changed for the better.
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1 comment:
Good blogging. Plenty of well researched links. But do you really think that people should be paid to recycle? Just how difficult is it?
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