Translate

Saturday, 28 November 2020

TerraCycle - the recycling programme with a difference

 

I have come across a company called TerraCycle that helps you recycle things that cannot be recycled.

Here is some information from their website

"What is TerraCycle?

TerraCycle is Eliminating the Idea of Waste® by recycling the "non-recyclable." Whether it's coffee capsules from your home, pens from a school, or plastic gloves from a manufacturing facility, TerraCycle can collect and recycle almost any form of waste. We partner with individual collectors such as yourself, as well as major consumer product companies, retailers, manufacturers, municipalities, and small businesses across 20 different countries. With your help, we are able to divert millions of pounds of waste from landfills and incinerators each month."

I went to their British website and was absolutely amazed at the range of free recycling programmes available there!  

Unfortunately when I went to the Spanish site there were not as many yet, but there was a programme for beach cleaning which would be fantastic for us here on Menorca!

Thumbnail for Programa de reciclaje de plásticos en playa

 There is also one for used pens and writing materials

 

Thumbnail for Programa de reciclaje de instrumentos de escritura

 There is also one for used pharmaceutical rubber gloves.

Thumbnail for Programa de reciclaje de Guantes de Nitrilo KIMTECH™


I have registered and am waiting for more information on how to use this service!

This all looks really interesting!

The blog song for today is: "Mr Blue Sky" by ELO


TTFN

 

Friday, 27 November 2020

Are Tetrapaks recyclable?

What is a Tetra Pak made from?

Tetra Paks are made up of a number of components which are layered: paperboard (made from wood), polyethylene (a type of plastic) and aluminum. These different components give Tetra Paks their unique properties: keeping the liquids in but the microbes out, and a strong but lightweight container.

Packaging material, aseptic carton package

When a Tetra Pak is recycled, all these component parts need to be separated out.

What Does Recycling Mean?

Whilst recycling can be thought of as a way of converting waste into a new material, more accurately it means a process to return material to a previous stage in a process that operates as a cycle. After all, the word is “re-cycling”. The idea is to take a used product and turn them back into the same type of product, such as glass bottles being melted down and formed into new glass bottles. There is no loss of quality, so this recycling of glass can go on forever.

When a product doesn’t get turned back into the same product, but one of lesser quality (as with plastic recycling) it isn’t recycled, it’s downcycled. Products that are downcycled often only undergo a limited number of cycles (maybe as few as 2) before reaching the end of their useful lives and ending up in landfill.

For Tetra Pak to be truly recycled, these layers of paperboard, polyethylene and aluminium would need to be separated out, and reformed to make new Tetra Pak cartons. However, that isn’t what happens.

Why Tetra Paks aren’t Sustainable

If Tetra Paks are recyclable, why aren’t they green? Let’s look at the different components, where they come from and what happens to them once the cartons are empty.

Paperboard (Wood)

Tetra Pak have devoted a significant amount of their website space to telling customers how sustainable their containers are. As well as talking at length about Tetra Paks being recyclable, they inform us that Tetra Pak source FSC-certified wood for 41% of their cartons worldwide (2013 figure). This equated to 32 billion FSC-labelled Tetra Paks reaching consumers in 2013.

Let’s look at this another way.

If 32 billion containers is 41%, then the amount of non-FSC wood Tetra Paks reaching consumers would be 46 million. 46 million containers made from non-renewable sources? That is a lot of wood. Tetra Pak might have a goal to reach 100% FSC-wood, but it isn’t happening now.

When this paperboard is recycled, it isn’t turned back into new Tetra Paks. It is unclear whether this is because their paperboard needs to come from virgin sources to avoid contamination (as is the case with plastic), or whether the quality of the recycled paperboard isn’t high enough to make new cartons, or some other reason. Whatever the reason, it is turned into office paper.

Plastic and Aluminium

The other two layers of the Tetra Pak, polyethylene (plastic) and aluminium, cannot be separated by the recycling process and remain combined as a “polymer”. The uses for this “polymer” is in the cement industry, or as low-cost housing material. The question arises, is there a genuine demand for this product, or is there a market because of an abundant supply of this waste material?

The fact that it gets reused and isn’t sent to landfill is great, except it doesn’t serve to make Tetra Paks a “green” solution. These cartons use fresh plastic and aluminium to make their cartons, and the waste products becomes something else entirely. Thus it is a linear system, not a cycle – and anything that is linear cannot be sustainable long-term.

A Word on Recycling Tetra Paks

The other thing to alwyas remember about recycling, is just because something can be recycled, it doesn’t mean that it will be recycled. The two are very different.

The Conclusion

Tetra Pak may want to be sustainable; they may want to use 100% FSC wood and achieve 100% recycling rates, but they still have a long way to go. Even if they achieve this, there’s no getting away from the fact that Tetra Pak production is a linear process. Tetra Paks are turned into different post-consumer products, meaning a constant supply of fresh virgin material (wood, oil and aluminum) is needed for their manufacture.

So after we drop our empty Tetra paks into the yellow container, they do go to a recycling plant but are not made into new Tetra paks but something else. That is a huge problem because there are a lot of products in Tetra pak containers but finding alternatives is not too difficult. 

The blog song for today is : "Perfect Day" by Lou Reed


TTFN



Wednesday, 25 November 2020

Recycling Cans - Aluminium and Steel


Aluminum Cans: Recycling Process Of Aluminum Cans

Overview

Many of the food and drink products we buy are packaged in cans made from either aluminium or steel and both of these materials can be recycled after we have finished with them to make either new cans or other products.

Did you know?

Recycling aluminium uses only around 5% of the energy and emissions needed to make it from the raw material bauxite. The metal can be recycled time and time again without loss of properties, so getting the aluminium recycling habit is one of the best things we can do for the environment.

Steel can also be recycled time and time again without loss of quality; by simply recycling our steel cans we can conserve non-renewable fossil fuels, reduce the consumption of energy and the emission of gasses like carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

How is it recycled?

Aluminium cans

  • Aluminium cans are shredded, removing any coloured coating.
  • They are then melted in a huge furnace.
  • The molten metal is poured into ingot casts to set. Each ingot can be made into around 1.5 million cans.

Aluminium foil is a different alloy and is usually recycled separately with other aluminium scraps to make cast items such as engine components, where it makes a big contribution to making vehicles lighter and more energy efficient.

How is Aluminium Recycled? The Aluminium Packaging Recycling

 

Tuesday, 24 November 2020

What happens after we put PET (Triangle number 1) plastic in the yellow bin on Menorca?

 Polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene terephthalate or PET is a type of thermoplastic polymer, or commonly a type of plastic, which is obtained synthetically from petroleum. It is a recyclable but not biodegradable material, widely used in beverage and textile packaging. The containers of this material that are deposited in the yellow containers of Menorca arrive at the Milà sorting plant where they are classified and packed for shipment to recycling companies in Spain.

Here are photos and text to explain the process!


1. From the offices of the plant in Valencia (this is the one Menorca sends the plastic to) you can see a large area of ​​bales from different selection plants in Spain, which are first untied and then unraveled at a rate of 4 tons / hour.


2. The discarded bottles then go through a magnet to remove the metal parts and through a label scraper.

 

3. The first selection of the bottles is made through a ballistic separator that separates them according to their size, density and shape (rolling and non-rolling).

4. Next, a second separation is performed by type of material using infrared, and by color using artificial vision. It is at this time when the process lines are duplicated and a first manual quality control is carried out. This duplication of lines is very important in order not to stop the plant in the event of possible breakdowns or scheduled maintenance..

5. Both process lines go to a wet mill where the bottles are crushed and the first washing of the material is carried out.

 

6. The resulting product is blown off and directed to the beginning of the wash belt where the labels and caps are first separated by flotation. The caps are only centrifuged and stored for sale, since it is a material with a lot of output that can be paid at € 200 / ton on average.


7. The material then goes through two stages of washing at 85-90ºC and centrifugation. Detergent and antifoam are used in the wash, which is eliminated in the rinse. The water is filtered and recirculated in the process, while the residual batch, approximately 40 tons / month with 50% humidity, is destined for composting.

8. Finally, a quality control is carried out on each 1,000 kg bag of PET LIGHT BLUE flakes, to determine the purity of the material prior to marketing.

  

PET LIGHT BLUE flakes are extruded to make reels of PET foil that will be the base material to produce new PET containers.
 

 
 

I am still a little confused as to what happens to HDPE (triangle number 2) Plastic and PS (triangle number 6) Polystyrene it looks like more investigation is needed!

The blog song for today is: "Confusion" by ELO (electric light orchestra)


TTFN



 

Monday, 23 November 2020

Cleaning with natural ingredients - Part 2 Bicarbonate of soda

 

Cleaning With Bicarbonate of Soda

Bicarbonate of soda can do more than keep your fridge smelling fresh and aid with baking. Its odour absorbing properties are useful throughout the home. It is a mild abrasive that can remove stains without scratching. Additionally, bicarbonate of soda is completely nontoxic. And unlike vinegar, it doesn’t have a strong smell. Try bicarbonate of soda for some of these household cleaning tasks.

Bicarbonate of soda on Pinterest | Sodas, Vinegar and Cleanses

In the kitchen:

  • Remove stains from coffee and tea mugs: Fill mugs with 1 part bicarbonate of soda and 2 parts water and let sit overnight. Scrub and rinse in the morning.
  • Remove odours from food containers: Rub a paste of bicarbonate of soda and water over the inside of the container. Let it sit for a day or two and wash it off. Repeat, if necessary.
  • Clean spills in the oven: Make a paste of 1/2 cup bicarbonate of soda and 3 tablespoons water. Smear the paste over the spills avoiding the heating elements. Let it sit for 15-20 minutes, or for bad spills, overnight. Wipe up paste and loosened spill with a damp dish cloth. Wipe oven the interior with water or a 3:1 mixture of water and distilled vinegar. (Note: If you have a self-cleaning oven, don’t use this method.)

In the bathroom:

  • Clean hairbrushes and combs: Remove any hair from the bristles, then immerse brushes and combs in a bicarbonate of soda/water solution. Let them soak for at least 30 minutes, then rinse well in hot water.

Throughout the home:

  • Remove odours from upholstered furniture: Simply sprinkle the fabric with bicarbonate of soda and then vacuum.
  • Erase crayon marks from white walls: Make a paste of equal parts baking soda and water, apply it to walls, let dry, and then wipe away. (Note: This method not recommended for coloured walls.)
  • Freshen carpets and rugs: Sprinkle the carpet or rug with bicarbonate of soda, let it sit for 15 minutes, and then vacuum.

Miscellaneous:

  • Remove burnt food from a grill grate: Sprinkle bicarbonate of soda on the grill grate and scrub with a brush. Rinse and wipe clean.
  • Clean lawn furniture: Mix 1/2 cup bicarbonate of soda with 200ml of warm water. Wipe down furniture and rinse. 

One of the best uses I have found for Bicarbonate of soda is skin irritation.  I have used it often to deal with itchy skin such as chicken pox and dermatitis.  The simplest way to use it is to put 2 big tablespoons in the bath (nothing else) and sit in the bath for at least 15 mins.  The other way is to make it into a paste using cooled, previously boiled water and put it directly on the irritatated parts.  It stops the itching sensation and the temptation to scratch, it is especially effective with chicken pox on kids!

The blog song for today is: "Our House" by Madness

 

TTFN

 

Sunday, 22 November 2020

The Menorca Preservation Fund - helping to keep Menorca beautiful.

Meet the heroes who are tackling the problem of plastic here on Menorca, they are part of an organisation who are determined to keep our island beautiful! I have copied the text from their website outlining their vision.

"Menorca, which was declared a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in 1993, enjoys a combination of beautiful natural landscapes, wonderful flora and fauna and spectacular marine ecosystems, which need protecting and preserving in order to ensure its sustainability.

The key remit of the fund is to pool money from people who love Menorca, as we do, and to distribute those funds to local organisations, working on the most effective campaigns and projects which aim to protect and restore the island’s natural environment.

We particularly focus on five areas: marine conservation, landscape conservation (including local food), and the smart and sensible management of waste, fresh water and energy."

I am very pleased to have been recommended this organisation and hope to become involved in some of the cleanups here.

 

A big round of applause to these volunteers!  If you would like to volunteer or find out more information you can visit their website - https://menorcapreservationfund.org/

To volunteer there is a registration process and a small annual fee, I think it is worth it to contribute to the natural beauty of our little island.

The blog song of today is "Wishing Well" by Free


TTFN

 

Saturday, 21 November 2020

Are Pringle Cans Recyclable?

 They are very popular everywhere but what happens when the tube is empty?  How do you dispose of it?





 

 

Pringles have been around for almost 50 years. Developed in 1967, the actual Pringle chips took some time to take off and it wasn’t until around the 1980s that they became a hit. Now they are sold in more than 140 countries.  

The problem with pringle containers is that they are not just made of one type of material. The majority of the package is made of composite material, foil-lined cardboard. In addition to the composite tube, the Pringle packaging has a plastic lid, a foil seal and a metal base. All these different materials in one small container make it difficult to recycle.    

The good news is that the manufacturer has set a goal for their packaging to be 100% reusable, recyclable or compostable. The bad news is that their goal is the end of 2025.

Here’s what you will need to do. Pull off the plastic lid, cut off the the top of the tube and the metal base, place all of these in your recycling bin.Then peel away the foil backing from the cardboard and that can then be recycled in the paper and metal bins.

CONCLUSION:
So are Pringle cans recyclable? Unfortunately, because of the mix of materials, the answer is no. They are too difficult to recycle. 

However, as you can see from the photo above,with a bit of effort in separating the different materials it can be done.  It's quite good fun too.

 

Cleaning with natural ingredients - Part 1 Vinegar

Using natural ingredients to clean with is one of the things that seems to be a widely spoken about topic so here is some information that I have discovered and would like to share.

 Surprising Vinegar Uses: White Vinegar Uses | Reader's Digest

Vinegar is one of the favourite cleaning agents for a variety of reasons. It will kill both salmonella and E.coli, two bacteria you’ll want to avoid. Consequently, white vinegar can be used to clean loads of things around your home. Here are just a few suggestions for what you can clean with vinegar.

In the kitchen:

  • Clean your coffeemachine: Run the machine with equal parts water and vinegar. Halfway through the cycle, turn it off and let it sit for 1 hour. Then complete the cycle.
  • Unblock a drain: Squirt some grease-fighting washing up liquid into the drain followed by at least 1 cup of boiling water. Next, pour in 1 cup of bicarbonate of soda and then 1 cup of white vinegar. After the bicarbonate of soda/vinegar mixture stops fizzing, wait an additional 5 minutes. Flush the drain with 2 cups of boiling water. ( I have tried this and it did actually work!)

In the bathroom:

  • Remove mineral deposits from a showerhead: Disconnect the showerhead. Using an old toothbrush, scrub it with vinegar to loosen debris. Use a toothpick to poke out stubborn deposits. Then soak the showerhead in a bowl of white vinegar overnight. In the morning, rinse the showerhead and reconnect it.
  • Prevent mould in the shower: Spray vinegar on shower walls and curtains whenever they get wet.

Throughout the home:

  • Clean windows: Mix 1 cup vinegar with 1 cup water. Spray solution on windows and wipe dry. If windows are very grimy, use full-strength, warm white vinegar. Spray it on windows and let it soak for a couple of minutes before rinsing and drying.
  • Remove mould from walls: Spray vinegar on walls, let sit for 15 minutes, rinse and let dry.
  • Washing machine maintenance: add some white vinegar and some Bicarbonate of soda to each wash.

Miscellaneous:

  • Remove sticker residue: Soak a rag in vinegar and lay it across the sticky area. Let it sit for a few minutes, then wipe off the loosened residue. ( This one looks interesting, I will give it a go, I am always having trouble getting labels off glass jars!)

I like the feeling I get when using natural products to clean with of knowing that I am not putting nasty chemicals into the water system along with the added bonus of saving money too!  A bottle of vinegar is under a euro to buy, the only downside is the plastic bottle but they can be recycled! So a win win situation!!

The blog song of today is "Don´t stop me now" by Queen ( I love it)


TTFN


 

 

Friday, 20 November 2020

Bio, Eco and Organic labels, what is the difference between them?

 I was asked this question the other day and I was a bit unsure!  I was under the impression that they were all the same.. to add to the confusion there is "sustainable" and "biodegradable"

I have found some information that may clear it up!

 BIO -  

Products which originate from an ecologically controlled cultivation. May not be genetically changed and grown without the use of conventional pesticides, artificial fertilsers or sewage mud. Meat must come from animals which were not treated with antibiotics or growth hormones. They cannot contain artificial food additives or maturing.

 ECO (eco-friendly)  “not environmentally harmful.”

When it comes to products, that means everything from production to packaging needs to be safe for the environment. But here's where it gets tricky: The FTC Green Guides say that in order for a product to be properly labeled as eco-friendly, the packaging must explain why it is environmentally responsible. Otherwise, it might not even be safe for the environment based on how consumers actually use the product. These misleading marketing claims are often called "greenwashig

Organic -

Organic is a legally defined term, which is to certify food, beauty products, and other agricultural products as being produced in a very specific way – mainly, as free from synthetic chemicals that are harmful to the environment and humans. So we only use this term if we’re talking about food, a restaurant, a beauty product, etc. that uses certified organic ingredients.

Organic food is the product of a farming system which avoids the use of man-made fertilisers, pesticides; growth regulators and livestock feed additives. Irradiation and the use of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) or products produced from or by GMOs are generally prohibited by organic legislation.

Sustainability-

A product is usually considered sustainable if it:

Doesn’t deplete natural, nonrenewable resources:  

Doesn’t directly harm the environment: The production, distribution, and/or consumption of the product uses as little energy as possible, and minimizes and responsibly disposes of waste.

Biodegradable -

Every time you do a food shop, you might check the labels to see if the packaging can be recycled. If the word ‘biodegradable’ pops up, you may be even more confident that you’re helping to reduce the amount of pollution that enters our environment. But biodegradable can be a misleading term, and it may be even be harmful for the planet.

SUMMARY:

BIO and Organic seem to be similar and related more to production.

ECO seems to be related to production and packaging

Sustainability seems to cover more than the previous two, it appears to include every aspect of the product and its impact on everything.

Biodegradable - this one seems like a bit of a sales pitch.

 I hope this has been of use!

The blog song for today is: "Park Life" by Blur.

TTFN

 

 

Thursday, 19 November 2020

RECICLOS - a cautiously optimistic update

 

Here is the latest on the recycling app available here on Menorca!  After having successfully scanned and emptied my virtual and real bin, I received points.  When there are 10 points you have the chance to spin the wheel of fortune!  I did this and won a prize which I went and collected this morning from "Sa Cooperativo del Camp" on the poligono in Ciutadella:  This is what I got!

I chose cheese to go with my veggies









 All the fruit and vegetables are from Menorca.
 
You can also give some of your points to the causes associated with RECICLOS,  which I think is a terrific idea! 

So far so good with the app, The only downside at the moment is that when I have tried to add "own Brand" water from the supermarkets it did not count!  Maybe it is because it is a relatively new thing and these are just "teething problems" (I will probably investigate further!)

I understand that plastic is here to stay but if we can at least buy stuff in containers that can actually be recycled then maybe the producers will see that their things are not selling, they may realise that they should change the packaging,  At the end of the day money is always behind everything. We as consumers can change things, they want us to buy their goods!!!!  so as Citizen Smith (in case you youngsters out there don´t know who this is, it is a comedy show from 1977) would say "Power to the people"

On that note I will give you the blog song for today: "Basket Case" by Greenday

TTFN






"Precyclying" - a short explanation from the gang at earth911.com

A report by: Taylor Ratcliffe, he is Earth911's customer support and database manager. He is a graduate of the University of Washington....