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Recycling plastics

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Recycling plastics

Should I recycle plastics?

Plastic food and drink packaging

Plastics are produced from oil which has to be subjected to high temperature processing, and has the addition of various chemical polymerisers, pigments, etc to make the range of plastic products in use today. Demands for oil are varied and vast, and if it is possible to reduce or avoid the need to use this limited resource, the longer oil reserves will last. Recycling plastics will prolong the life of oil reserves.

The energy needed to produce new plastic products from recycled plastics is far less than that needed to produce plastics from raw materials. Recycling plastics will reduce the energy needs and reduce the amount of greenhouse gas emissions associated with manufacture.

Recycling plastics reduces the amount of plastic disposed of at landfill sites.

Should I recycle degradable plastics?

Some plastic products are described as 'degradable' or 'biodegradable'. Manufacturers of degradable plastics take into account the end use of the product, the likely period the product will be in storage before use, the typical storage conditions, the user's needs as regards strength and life, etc. The product is then manufactured to meet these use demands and then to degrade. Some products require combinations of temperature, moisture, and or light before they start to degrade. Even degradable plastic items can take a long time to degrade.

There are concerns that mixing degradable plastic bags with other plastics will affect the quality of new recycled products. It is currently recommended that normal plastic carrier bags be recycled by taking them to your local household waste recycling centre (new window) and placing them in the appropriate container, whilst most supermarkets also operate their own bag recycling schemes.

You can also use degradable or biodegradable bags to wrap your waste either within your grey lidded wheeled refuse bin if you have one, or inside your black sacks if you do not have the wheeled bins yet.

No plastic bags of any sort should be placed in the blue lidded wheeled recycling bins. Normal plastic carrier bags, degradable plastic bags and biodegradable plastic bags should also never be placed in the brown wheeled bin for compostable waste. Compostable bags may be used in the brown bin, but they must state that they are '100% compostable'.

How do I reduce the amount of plastics I dispose of?

Most of the waste plastics produced by householders are packaging. 60% of the waste plastics produced by Suffolk Coastal residents are disposable plastic containers, for example, drink and milk containers, yoghurt and margarine type containers. The remainder is plastic film, for example, carrier bags, food bags and food wrapping. It is possible to reduce the amount of carrier bags by using reusable shopping bags and plastic carrier bags can also be reused.

Shoppers can make choices as to the type of containers they buy, but the choice is not always easy. Some meats are sold in expanded polystyrene trays which are difficult to recycle, some in plastic trays which are easier to recycle. Some alternatives to plastic can be more difficult to recycle, for example, paper-based drinks cartons which often have a plastic lining and plastic spout, although facilities are now available to recycle paper-based food and drink cartons.

How and where can I recycle plastics?

Suffolk Coastal has introduced a wheeled bin recycling service to all homes across the district for the recycling of plastic, cans, paper, card and cardboard. Everyday disposable (single use) items of plastic packaging from within the home - for example, bottles, pots, tubs and trays - can all be placed in the blue lidded bin for recycling. These include milk and drink bottles, shampoo bottles, margarine pots, yoghurt pots, ice cream tubs and clean food trays (not polystyrene).

A huge range of symbols and numbers, relating to or purporting to relate to the recyclability (or otherwise) of an item are used by manufacturers of packaging. These markings mean a range of different things, and some markings that mean very different things can look very similar. Many recyclable items of plastic packaging that can be placed in the blue lidded bin have no such markings. We advise residents not to rely on any symbols or numbers that items of plastic may bear; please refer to the lists of items of plastic packaging that are acceptable, or if in doubt, call 01394 444000 for advice.

Please remember to rinse all bottles and containers, remove lids or bottle tops (but include the plastic lids or foil bottle tops in the recycling bin) and squash items to reduce their bulk.

The other main recycling facilities for plastics in the district are at the household waste recycling centres (new window) at Foxhall, Leiston, and Felixstowe. These have facilities for the collection of plastic bottles and other disposable plastic containers, plastic carrier bags and durable plastic items such as garden furniture. There are also facilities for recycling plastic carrier bags at the major supermarkets within the district.

Can we have plastic recycling banks at local recycling sites?

We have looked at the possibility of putting plastics banks at local recycling sites in our towns and villages. Because plastics are very bulky but light, most sites would need either large containers or very frequent emptying to prevent the sites overflowing and becoming a problem. The cost of this is high and would not give Council Tax payers value for money. We do not therefore offer plastics recycling banks.

Why can't I recycle some plastics?

It is technically possible to recycle most plastics, but not always cost effective.

For the new recycled product to be acceptable to the purchaser is must be of a good quality and have all the properties, such as consistent quality, impact resistance, stability to light, heat and moisture, demanded of it. Generally the manufacturer will therefore need a material that clean, guaranteed not to be contaminated with chemicals, and that is just one type of plastic.

After plastics have been collected for recycling they need to be sorted into the different types, baled and transported for further processing and cleaning. The cost of this can be high and it can therefore be uneconomical to collect some types of plastics. For this reason most plastics recycling schemes target drink, milk and plastic packaging which is easier to separate into its different types, and more cost effective.

In order to make the plastics recycling service to Suffolk Coastal residents affordable, the service concentrates on disposable plastic containers such as milk and drink bottles, margarine tubs and yoghurt pots, shampoo bottles, plastic food containers and clean food trays.

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