Friday 28 March 2008

Recycling

Well I think just about everyone now has got the hang of recycling household waste, or at least we know we should. Actually putting it in the recycling container is where some of us slip up! There is a debate going on in the UK at the moment over how rubbish should be paid for. Should it carry on being part of the Council Tax or should there be some new way of measuring household waste?

When we moved to Switzerland we just presumed it was the same as the UK until someone told us we would have to buy the appropriate colour stickers for our bin bags according to the capacity of the bag. If they didn't have a sticker they didn't get taken. Things have changed slightly now in that you actually buy the official bags so they all look the same, rather than having to buy different stickers for different bags and working out if you had put the correct one on. So in effect we pay for the volume of waste that we put out to be collected.

This immediately made us much more careful in what we threw out and what we collected to be taken to the recycling depots. Our rubbish went down enormously when we moved here. Part of that is due to the fact that we buy almost all of our fruit and vegetables from the market, reusing bags from the last time. But mostly it is down to the fact that it is blatantly obvious that if we didn't recycle what we could we would have to pay for about 3 times the amount of bags that we currently do.

We use 35 litre bags and usually put out only one a week. We have a compost bin in the garden for all our raw food waste. I used to put cooked food in it too, but someone told me that wasn't right and also no dairy. Please correct me if I've got that wrong!
We have a big green bucket for garden waste which is collected 1-2 times per month depending on the time of year. We have a paper collection every 2 weeks which has to be bundled neatly with the right sort of string! There is also a metal collection 2 times a year for everything from tin cans to bike frames.

Most supermarkets, even the tiny local ones, have a glass, PET plastic, milk plastic (white bottles) and battery collection point. And in the last year or so local recycling points have been springing up consisting of what looks like pedal bins in the ground with a huge underground container. The children love watching these being emptied as the lorry lifts them right out of their hole and high into the air to be emptied into the lorry.

I must confess that it did take me a while to get used to the idea of taking some recycling with me every time I visited the shops, but when it started dramatically constricting the floor space in our hall I found it easier to remember.

There are also regular clothes collections done by charities. There are not so many charity shops here as in the UK so perhaps this is why the collections work so well. I remember when we used to get one of the bags put through our door in Scotland we hardly ever put anything in it and didn't notice many on the streets on collection day either. But here most houses manage to find something to donate.

Something else that happens here is that if people have things that they no longer need, and perhaps not enough, or not good enough quality to sell, then they just put them outside on the wall with a sign saying 'GRATIS'/'FREE' and people can help themselves. I've seen bookcases, books, chairs, kitchen implements, crockery, ornaments and all sorts of other oddments. And they all get taken eventually.

When we left the UK there were no door to door recycling collections. We could take paper to the supermarket to be recycled but cardboard was not allowed. Glass was pretty easy to recycle, but I had never seen a metal collection and only a few places for drinks bottles, but no other sort of plastic. I believe it has changed a lot in the last couple of years and I would love to hear how it compares to what we have in Switzerland and how people think it could be improved. Please leave a comment!

9 comments:

babytreasuretrove said...

we live in somerset and have a weekly recycling collection by the council - we can leave glass, cans and paper to be picked up, with a separate collection for food waste. - this results in us not having to leave too much other waste - any waste which can't be recylced is only collected fortnightly.

cardboard etc we take to the local tip, which we probably have to do fortnightly.
we cut down on plastic bags and other supermarket packaging by buying our fruit and veg from an organic supplier who delivers everything in a cardboard box once a week - the previous week's box gets collected and re-used

Mairi Rivers said...

I've heard that there is outrage in some areas about the fortnightly rubbish collection. Do you find it is enough? Do you have enough space to store it for two weeks? I suppose that is a great incentive to actually make use of the recycling rather than lazily throwing it in the rubbish.

It does sound like you get a lot recycled though which is fantastic. Even food waste. But not plastic.

I have also heard of people leaving their excess packaging at the supermarket. Has anyone done that?

Anonymous said...

I took a while to get into the swing of recycling we're I live in Liverpool, but its become second nature to separate our rubbish (my eldest son is great at helping, its his little job). Now I find that our wheelie bin is half full and my recycling bin is near over flowing. Our waste is collected weekly and the recycling bin is fortnightly, which really isn't enough, but I think a lot of people especially in my street aren't really recycling as much as the could to warrant a weekly recycling collection.

Linda said...

It sounds as if Switzerland are a bit ahead of us in recycling.In the highlands where we are there is no cardboard recycling collection so you would have to go to the municipal dump about 15 miles away. Same situation with metal although we were able to book an appointment for somebody to collect our old washing machine.

As to composting I don't put any cooked food in the chooks have that. Only other things I don't add is onions and tomatoes and I found that pineapple skins are not successful. We never have any dairy left!
We are using cloth bags for all shopping now and I am going to go over to containers in the freezer rather than bags when I have enough! Great Blog! Linda

babytreasuretrove said...

think it should really be collected weekly - it's ok to be fortnightly when the weather is cooler, but in the summer (if we get one this year!) whenthe weather is hot, there could be real hygiene issues, rotting rubbish attracts mice etc.

we do pay alot in our council tax for collection, but our collectors refuse to take any rubbish that isn't in our wheelybins - they are very selective!

there was also an article in our local paper this week about the recylcing people picking up recycling from a local pub and them mixing it with other waste ie. not recylcing it - so who knows? we may have good intentions but our efforts may not actually be working

dottyspots said...

In Norway there are even recycling bins on the trains. You are expected to sort your rubbish into leftover food, paper and cans.

gogreen said...

As far as I can make out it varies widely by local authority. In West Lothian we have 3 large wheelie bins (and you can get extra large on request).
Blue for recyclable paper,card, plastics and cans
Brown (basically large compost bin) for garden waste. Can no longer put food waste in in case it has been contaminated by touching meat???). But you can get a free compost bin for your garden.
Black for evrything else.
The Blue and brown bins are emptied on alternate weeks with the black. Has been running for a couple of years now with no real problems.
Still have to take glass to the bottle bank.
I have relatives in Argyll and they still have black bags (they can buy a wheelie bin) -no kerbside recycling. Don't know if this is to do with costs/distances.

LIke the idea of leaving things out -here the streets would probably end up like flytips. But we do have freecycle where you can offer unwanted goods for collection.I've given quite a few things away on that.
Anne

Anonymous said...

We have a fortnightly collection here and it's fine, just takes a bit of thought is all.

I actually usually still have space in the bin and we have a little decluttering spree on the day before black bin day (as opposed to green bin day, when we clear out the non compostable bits from the garden!)

Hi Mairi!

Linda said...

linda@sonesuk said
I found some figures the other day which I posted on my blog which may be of interest. Switzerland lead the way in recycling by recycling 57% of household waste whereas the UK only manage 9%. Which is pretty poor the US are even worse at 5%!