Please note the errors in the printed and download copy:
The
Co-operative is now putting fairtrade cotton `bags for life' into its
food stores - should be in all co-operative group stored by the end of
summer (priced at 99p)
Appleyards delicatessen: still give plastic
bags, but also sell 4 or 5 types of reusable bags, including 'Turtle'
string bags, and simple ones made out of recycled cement bags! stock a
range of vegan cakes, local and organic foods.
Fordhall farm: www.fordhallfarm.com
Additions:
30.7.07
This just in from SABC: Tetrapacs
Borough Council
offering new recycling points for Tetra pak
Residents of the
Borough may have noticed mysterious looking, large black steel containers
appearing around the Borough. Don’t
panic, it’s not an alien invasion. Shrewsbury and Atcham
Borough Council have been successfully working in partnership with the private
sector to enable more domestic waste materials to be recycled. The latest addition to the mix is the
installation of new bring banks for Tetra pak and other paper based liquid food
and drink cartons.
Cllr. Mrs. Judith
Williams, Portfolio Holder for Recycling at Shrewsbury
and Atcham Borough Council, commented “Though
Tetra pak makes up only a very small fraction of Shrewsbury and Atcham’s household waste
stream, it is significant for the consumer because it is bulky. Combined with the environmental benefits of
recycling the mainly paper content of these cartons, we have been actively
trying to facilitate more recycling of this type of packaging for a while
now.
It’s great news for the householders in Shrewsbury that we can now help them recycle
more stuff, more often by offering these new facilities. This highlights our ability to work in
partnership on waste issues to achieve sustainable and cost effective ways to
boost recycling in the area”.
Tetra Pak beverage
cartons consist of three main materials:
·
Paperboard
(typically 70-90%)
·
Low-density
polyethylene [LDPE] (typically 10-25%)
·
Aluminium foil
(about 5%, only in long life or aseptic packages)
By far and away the
vast majority of the carton is fully recyclable high quality virgin clean white
paperboard which can be re-pulped and turned into fresh paper. Unfortunately the layers of plastic and
metal foil on the cartons makes it harder to recover the paper, but it can be
done.
Tetra pak are
currently running trials with four UK
mills but until the results are available, the cartons are currently being
baled into mill-sized bales and collected into 26-tonne loads then shipped over
to Sweden
en masse. There they are pulped and the
fibres are recovered and recycled, whilst the plastic and any aluminium are used
to make Refuse Derived Fuel, pellets which are burnt to provide heat and power
for the recycling factory.
We will working
closely with Tetra pak and the paper mills to continually review this
arrangement and be strongly encouraging the use of UK based reprocessors when this is
possible.
As such new bring
sites have been installed at:
·
Asda, on Old Potts Way
·
Co-op in
Radbrook Green
·
Sainsbury on Meole Brace
Retail Park
·
Frankwell
Carpark by the Guildhall
·
Minsterley at
the Parish Hall
Its all been made
possible thanks to The Alliance for Beverage Cartons and the Environment in the
UK (ACE UK), launching a £1.2 million National Recycling Fund to help
dramatically boost beverage carton recycling in the UK. Agreed between member companies Tetra Pak,
Elopak and SIG Combibloc, this fund has substantially increased industry
support to local authorities, paper mills and other organisations in order to
help them establish carton collections.
The aspiration of the
group is to use the fund to encourage more local authorities to run more
collections for their packaging in order to meet the consumer demand and help
overcome the waste issues associated with their product.
Regular (weekly)
collection of the materials from the bring sites will be made by ABITITI a
large international waste management company based at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire. Collection will utilise a compaction vehicle
on a milk-round basis.
You can find extra
information on these two websites:
http://tetrapakrecycling.co.uk/02.htm
http://www.tetrapak.com/
Remember,
producing paper from recycled pulp saves around 70 per cent of the energy
required to produce virgin paper. This
means that there are massive reductions in greenhouse gas emissions associated
with paper recycling. For every tonne of
paper sent for recycling the savings are estimated to be as much as:
·
at least 30,000 litres of water
·
3,500 KWh electricity (enough for an average 3 bedroom house for one
year)
·
95% of various air pollutants.
Did you know?
About one fifth of the contents of household dustbins consist of paper and
card, of which half is newspapers and magazines. This is equivalent to over 4kg
of waste paper per household in the UK each week. Paper is the most recycled material in the UK, but a lot
is still being landfilled, so more needs to be done.
Thanks to Shrewsbury
and Atcham Borough Council and Tetra-pak taking the initiative on this scheme,
one way the people of Shrewsbury can now help to ‘do their bit’ is to take
cartons to the afore mentioned bring bank locations in the town. In addition to the Shrewsbury and Atcham Borough Council sites,
Tetra Pak can be recycled at the new Tesco Eco-store in Sundorne and at the County
Councils Household Recycling Centre in Battlefield.
Additional information
Food and beverage
cartons, similar to those used today, were first commercially produced in America
in the 1930’s. Currently they are used to package a wide range of products including:
milk, fruit juice, cream, custard, detergents, soup and wine.
The carton is a
lightweight, low-resource use, energy saving package designed to impact
minimally on the environment throughout its lifecycle, using less fossil fuel
energy in production than other forms of liquid packaging. The readily stackable nature of the
container also optimising efficiency with regards to transport logistics making
them less energy intense to move around.
Cartons are the only
drinks packaging in the UK
made from a renewable source, the predominant material being wood fibre, grown
in sustainably managed Scandinavian forests.
Life cycle analysis studies have consistently shown that Tetra Pak has a
lower carbon footprint and lesser ecological impact than all alternative
packages.
The chap who invented
them even won a Nobel Prize for this contribution to the world.
Carton recycling
Despite their
environmental credentials, there is an inherent complexity with regards to
recycling composite materials. So for
many years now to the frustration of waste managers, consumers and the food
packaging industry alike these have been considered not suitable for
recycling. It is however totally
possible, though the UK is
performing badly, cartons are successfully recycled throughout Europe, where high quality wood-derived fibres have
consistently been valued by the market.
More details on the
recycling process
Once baled, cartons
are shipped to Scandanavia then delivered to the plant where they are dropped
into a pulper, similar to a domestic liquidiser, filled with water, and
agitated for around 20 minutes. This delaminates the packaging, breaking down
the fibre to produce a grey-brown slurry.
The wood fibres, which makes up between 75-90 per cent of a typical
carton, is then used to manufacture new paper products.
The non-fibre
remainder, which is mainly polyethelyene and a smaller amount of aluminium on
some packages is used to manufacture Refuse Derived Fuel, which is burnt to
provide the ‘’carbon neutral’’ heat and power for the recycling factory.
For more detailed
information on tetrapak contact Janet Burgess, Recycling Officer, Tetra Pak
Ltd, Bedwell Road, Cross Lanes, Wrexham, LL13 0UT on 0870 442 6079.