Recycling

Australians love to recycle, but are you as good as you think you are? Too many of us “Wish Cycle” - we want to do the right thing and feel that the more you can recycle, the better. We think it should be recycled, so we put it in our kerbside bin. Cos really, the less we send to landfill in those red bins, the better right? 
Wrong! The irony is that, in order to recycle more, sometimes we have to recycle less. 

The Problem

A recent report by Cleanaway found that 89% of us believe recycling is important, 74% rate ourselves as good or very good recyclers, and nearly all of us are participating in some form of sustainable behaviour in our everyday lives. Despite this positive attitude, other results from the research suggest that misconceptions and lack of knowledge around recycling may be compromising our efforts. 

Misconceptions were observed at all stages of the recycling process: 47% of Australians believe that soft plastics can go into recycling; 26% don’t know that our food containers need to be rinsed before going into recycling; and 15% think that we can just put everything in the recycling bin and it will get sorted out at the recycling facility!?!

It doesn’t help that so many of us are wildly confused about what we should recycle… Paper towels? Bottle tops? Garden hoses? Batteries? Paper envelopes with plastic windows? Plastic forks? Toothpaste tubes? Roll on deodorants? Greasy pizza boxes? Light bulbs? Broken glass or smashed crockery? Tissue box with the plastic rim attached?

Items frequently found in kerbside recycling bins that should not be there include:
  • Plastic bags
  • Broken glassware or mirrors or glass from a photo frame
  • Batteries 
  • Clothing and other textiles 
  • Food containers with food in them.
  • Building materials, like pieces of timber or bricks
  • Paper towels
No matter how much we’d like to send them to a 'good' place, we have to stop clogging the recycling stream with non-recyclable items. Our aspirational recycling can contaminate an entire batch of recyclables, forcing everything to be sent to landfill. That’s right - it potentially only takes one non-recyclable item to contaminate an entire load of recyclables.

What can you do?

List of Services

More Actions You Can Take

Share by: