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today18 September 2023 3
Derby City Council has revealed that the cost of processing and disposing of contamination (incorrect or dirty items) in recycling bins is currently costing £450,000 a year. Some of the most common problem items are bagged waste, used nappies, food waste, electricals, hard plastic, and plastic bags and films.
Things like food waste and leftover takeaways are particularly problematic as they spread in the collection vehicles, contaminating large amounts of otherwise clean and dry recycling.
Batteries and items containing batteries (such as old phones and vapes) are another contaminant which pose a very real fire risk in the back of collection vehicles and at processing sites. Batteries or anything containing batteries should never be placed in a wheelie bin.
Each month, around 300 tonnes of waste material is separated from the recycling and sent for disposal at significant cost. Much of which is avoidable.
The campaign is asking all residents with blue recycling bins to pick up just two simple habits:
Collection teams routinely check the contents of blue recycling bins for contamination and bins that have visible contamination won’t be collected. It is then the resident’s responsibility to remove any contamination before their next scheduled collection.
Councillor Hardyal Dhindsa, Cabinet Member for Communities and Streetpride said: “Most of our residents are great at recycling and do the city proud. However, as a city we can recycle more and we can recycle better. We know it’s easy to think that one wrong item doesn’t matter but it really does. Just one household not recycling correctly can spoil it for all their neighbours.
“Whilst rising costs continue to effect residents, they also add pressure to the Councils budget. If everyone recycled correctly, the money saved could fund services like free bulky waste collections, street cleaning and help protect vulnerable residents.
“Additionally, recycling is the right thing to do for our environment. As a Council, we’ve committed to being net-zero by 2035 and residents improving their recycling is a part of that ambition.”
As part of the campaign, Derby City Council are working alongside partner organisations to amplify messages to communities across the city.
Written by: Erewash Sound
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