Brisbanes Best Recycling Guide 2013
Brisbanes Best Recycling Guide 2013
for households
Brisbanes best
Supported by
Recycling in Brisbane
Brisbane City Council is committed to making Brisbane Australias most sustainable city. To do this we need your help to reduce household waste and increase recycling. Recycling is easy and benets our environment. Recycling:
9 reduces greenhouse gas emissions 9 saves energy and water 9 conserves non-renewable resources for future generations 9 reduces reliance on landlls 9 creates more job opportunities than landll disposal 9 makes caring for the environment easy!
Last year Council collected 92,515 tonnes of paper, cardboard, glass, plastic and metal from Brisbane households through the kerbside recycling service. These materials have now been recycled and remade into all sorts of new things including packaging items, parts of toys, bikes, cars and even trains. Although this is a fantastic effort, we can still do better as were still sending things that can be recycled to landll every year.
Nearly 30% of the bin contains items that could have been recycled through the yellow-lidded recycling bin. 50% of the bin contains garden waste and/or kitchen scraps that could have been recycled in a compost bin or worm farm.
General waste 22% Recyclables 28% Garden waste 29% Food waste 21%
80% of the contents in your general waste bin could have been kept out of landll.
You can help reduce what is sent to landll by nding out more about what can and cannot be recycled, and by putting the right items in the right bin. 2|3
If you take a look around your house, youll nd recyclables in every room. The kitchen, laundry, bathrooms and even the garage provide lots of recycling opportunities for the keen recycler.
Place items made from paper, cardboard, rm plastic, metal (aluminium and steel) and glass in your yellow-lidded recycling bin. Whats the easiest way to tell if something is recyclable? If youre unsure whether an item may be recycled, ask yourself: What is it made from? If the answer is paper, cardboard, rm plastic, metal (aluminium and steel), or glass you can be condent it can be recycled. Even if it does not have recycling symbol, it can still be recycled in the yellow-lidded recycle bin.
In the bathroom
Recycle: toilet rolls; shampoo, conditioner and body wash containers; hair gel tubs; aerosol cans including those used for air fresheners, deodorant and hair spray; glass bottles used for aftershave, perfume or vitamins; empty cleaning product bottles.
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In the laundry
Recycle: washing detergent boxes and all plastic containers including those used for washing liquid, fabric softener, stain remover and cleaning products.
In the garage
Recycle: newspapers, boxes, empty aerosols and packaging; all plastic containers and paint tins (empty and dry). Containers or tins from the garage still containing paint, oil or chemicals can be disposed of at Council transfer stations. See page 17 for details.
All types of paper can be recycled with the exception of a few items which are listed below. Newspaper, junk mail, brochures, ofce paper, gift wrapping paper, used note books, packaging paper, glossy paper and magazines, envelopes (including window envelopes), phone books, greeting cards, coloured paper, paper bags and scrap paper. Padded envelopes, photographs, thermal fax paper, wax-coated paper, tissues, toilet paper and nappies.
Why cant we recycle tissues or nappies? Not only is it unhygienic for items containing bodily uids to be processed alongside other recyclables, the paper bres in these items are too short to recycle making it too difcult to recover any worthwhile material.
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Cardboard
Cardboard boxes, milk/juice cartons (i.e. long-life milk and fruit juice cartons/boxes), toy boxes, pizza and cereal boxes, detergent boxes, tissue boxes and cardboard coffee cups. Wax-coated cardboard boxes i.e. fruit boxes.
Why cant a wax-coated cardboard box be recycled? Because the wax covering the box makes it too difcult to recover paper bres.
Plastic
Plastic items are sorted using an optical sorting machine which groups similar plastic types together and detects and removes nonrecyclable plastics. All rm plastic containers such as soft drink bottles; takeaway containers; margarine containers; milk and juice bottles; yoghurt tubs; biscuit and sushi trays; detergent and shampoo bottles; disposable plates and cups. All soft plastics, such as plastic bags, plastic lm or cling wrap, chip packets, toothpaste tubes, bubble wrap, styrofoam or polystyrene products, straws and disposable nappies. Hard plastics that are not containers such as toys or toothbrushes are also not recyclable.
Why cant we recycle soft plastics? While plastic bags and other soft plastic packaging is sometimes made from a recyclable content, their lightweight nature often results in them getting caught around moving machine parts and jamming them. Thats why its best to dispose of soft plastics in your general waste bin, or you can return them to the major supermarkets where they are collected and recycled using specialist technology.
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All aluminium and steel packaging can be recycled including aerosol cans, paint tins (empty and dry), aluminium foil and pie trays. Vegetable and food cans, pet food cans, soft drink cans, pie trays, aerosol cans, aluminium foil and paint tins (empty and dry). Batteries, gas bottles, wire, scrap iron or tin, cutlery and white goods. What should I do with other metal items that cannot be recycled through the yellow-lidded recycling bin? Other household items including batteries, gas bottles, scrap metal or white goods are collected for recycling at Council transfer stations. See page 24 for details.
Glass
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Only glass used for packaging i.e bottles and jars is collected for recycling through the yellow-lidded recycling bin. Other glass items are manufactured differently which makes them more prone to shattering and less suitable for recycling. All clear, green and brown bottles and jars, including jam jars, food jars, sauce bottles, beverage bottles, perfume and vitamin bottles. Drinking glasses, ceramics, window glass, light bulbs, mirror or window glass, heat-proof glass and cookware such as Pyrex. Why cant I recycle these items? The glass used for bottles and jars is heavy duty and durable, while other glass types are designed for specic uses which require them to be more fragile, transparent or heat resistant. When mixed with recyclable glass, other glass types weaken the new glass products, which is why it is best to dispose of all non-packaging related glass in your general waste bin.
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Dont let good recycling go to waste, upgrade your recycling bin today. Visit www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/ waste or call Council on (07) 3403 8888.
Get the kids involved in recycling and worm farming at home! Download Lunchtime Legends and Worm World free from the Apps Store.
Its lunchtime and the race is on to recycle! Sort the falling rubbish into the two school bins, and beat the clock and your friends to become Brisbanes best recycler. Once youve mastered lunchtime recycling, take your knowledge home and become the king of composting. But watch out for the possums who will try to raid your bins!
Worm World
Get down and dirty with natures cutest recyclers and take charge of your very own worm farm. Theyre sensitive little creatures, so keep your worm farm healthy! Watch out for the rats and other nasties that will invade and wreak havoc in your worm farm. This is a great way for children to learn about worm farms and organic recycling! Worm World and Lunchtime Legends are also available on www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/waste
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Containers do not need to be rinsed before being placed in your recycling bin. Although rinsing does reduce bin odours, not doing this will not ruin the whole load of recycling or stop the individual item from being recycled. Do not put your recyclables in plastic bags, instead place the items loose in your recycling bin. Plastic bags cannot be opened at the recycling facility for safety reasons, and all the goods inside are sent to landll. Dont forget that every little bit counts. Even making the effort to recycle one or two extra items each week, such as the junk mail from the letterbox or the wempty air freshener can from the upstairs bathroom, helps to conserve precious resources from going to landll. Remove the lids from containers and bottles before you place them in the recycling bin. This will save space in your bin and ensure that each material type is recycled. Only glass jars and bottles are suitable for recycling. Drinking glasses, ceramics and heat-proof glass (e.g. Pyrex) melt at a different temperature and cannot be recycled and should be put in your general waste bin.
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Plastic bags
Soft plastics, such as plastic bags, garbage bags and cling wrap are light-weight and frequently jam the sorting machines by becoming tangled around rotating machinery parts. Soft plastics can be recycled through specialised collection services located at major supermarkets, and should not go in your yellow-lidded recycling bin.
This is why we ask you to place your recyclables in your recycling bin loose rather than putting them in plastic bags.
Food waste
Food and liquid should be emptied from containers before they are put in the yellow-lidded recycling bin. A small amount of food residue is acceptable and will not ruin the whole load of recycling. Rinsing is not required, although it helps to reduce odour in your recycling bin.
Other contaminants
You can safely dispose of containers that previously held household chemicals in your recycling bin, providing the containers are empty and dry. Used containers of oil, tins of paint, car batteries and gas bottles cannot be recycled in the yellow-lidded bin, but can be disposed of at one of Councils transfer stations every day of the year. See page 24 for details. Other hazardous waste items, such as pool chemicals, pesticides, and acids can be safely disposed of at one of Councils free drop-off hazardous waste collection days. For more information phone Council on (07) 3403 8888 or visit www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/waste
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Your recycling is collected from the kerb by a dedicated recycling truck and travels to the recycling facility, where it passes through a series of manual and mechanical sorting processes.
At the beginning of the sorting process, workers attempt to manually remove potentially harmful items such as gas bottles, or items that are not suitable for recycling in the yellow-lidded bin such as disposable nappies, garden waste or electronics. The items then travel through several machines that sort the items by size and material type. By the end of the journey, the items have been grouped by material type and are baled up, ready for sale and reprocessing. This is very different from what happens to general waste. General waste, after its been collected from your general waste bin, is taken to one of Councils four transfer stations. At the transfer station it is crushed and compacted as much as possible. The compacting of materials helps to prolong the life of the landll by reducing the size of the waste. After the waste has been compacted, it is loaded into large semi-trailers and taken for disposal in landll.
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Recycling myths
Myth 1 If I put just one wrong thing in my recycling bin, Ill spoil a whole truck load of recycling. Once collected, your recyclables are taken to Visys Material Recovery Facility (MRF) to be sorted into separate streams of paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, and metal (aluminium and steel). Contaminants or non-recyclable items are detected by several manual and sophisticated mechanical sorters, and are removed to landll. See page 19 for more details. Myth 2 It doesnt matter what I put in my recycling bin because it all ends up in landll. Your recycling is collected by a dedicated eet of recycling trucks, and taken to Visys Material Recovery Facility (MRF) at Gibson Island. In 2012-2013, Council collected 92,515 tonnes of paper, cardboard, glass, plastic and metals from Brisbane households, which was then sorted, baled, and prepared for reprocessing into new products and packaging. Your general waste is collected by a different eet of trucks that are dedicated to collecting general waste only, which is taken to Council transfer stations before being disposed of in landll.
Myth 3 Brisbane has ample space to bury our waste, so I dont need to recycle. Brisbanes current landll site is nearing capacity, and any future landll sites and alternative waste technologies will require land that is no longer available close to our city. This means more fuel and resources will be required to transport waste, but more importantly, by burying our waste, we are failing to address the real need to manage our natural resources in a more sustainable way. Keeping materials in a loop of constant use through recycling maximises the resources and materials already in use while conserving untouched resources for future generations. Recycling is also a way of battling other environmental issues as it helps to conserve water, reduce energy use, reduce greenhouse emissions, reduce our reliance on landlls, conserve natural habitats and create local jobs.
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Myth 4 The triangular symbol is a recycling symbol. The triangular symbol made from arrows is known as the Mobius loop. It indicates that a product is recyclable, but it is not reliably found on all recyclable items. Rather than relying on the symbol, a better way of identifying whether an item is recyclable is to ask yourself what it is made from. If it is made from paper, cardboard, rm plastic, metal (aluminium and steel) or glass, it can be recycled in Councils yellow-lidded recycling bins. See pages 5-11 for more details. Myth 5 Anything that is recyclable can go in my yellow-lidded recycling bin. Councils kerbside recycling service only accepts packaging items made from paper, cardboard, plastic, steel, aluminium and glass. Many other household recyclable items, such as electronic waste, printer cartridges, mobile phones, plastic bags, tyres, clothes and scrap metal, can be recycled but must be taken to a specialist collection service in your community. Visit www.recyclingnearyou.com.au for more details. Councils transfer stations also offer a recycling service for a range of materials. See pages 24-29 for more details.
Myth 6 Plastic bags can be recycled at many local supermarkets but I cant put them in my recycling bin at home. Plastic bags are only recyclable through dedicated plastic bag recycling collections at local supermarkets. They are not recoverable through Councils household recycling service, as they damage and jam the machines at the recycling facility. Recyclable items should be placed loosely in your recycling bin and not in plastic bags. Plastic bags, cling wrap, bubble wrap and nappies are considered contaminants in the recycling process and should be placed in the general waste bin. See page 16-17 for more details. Myth 7 I have to wash and clean out every container before I put it in my recycling bin. Rinsing helps to minimise odours in your bin and in the recycling process. However, as long as your containers are generally empty of food and liquid there is no need to rinse them, they can be put straight into your recycling bin.
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electronic waste (see page 28 for details)
9 uorescent lighting tubes and bulbs 9 garden waste and non-treated timber 9 glass, cardboard and metals (ferrous and non-ferrous) 9 LPG bottles (empty and weighing up to 9kg) 9 re extinguishers 9 oil, used mineral engine oil* 9 paints, water-based and oil-based* 9 white goods and appliances 9 unwanted household items.
* A 20 litre limit for each product or chemical applies for residents. All commercial operators must comply with relevant waste disposal regulations.
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Recycling organics
Composting food and garden waste
Did you know that 50% of what goes to landll is organic waste from our kitchens and gardens? Composting is an inexpensive, natural process that transforms your kitchen and garden waste into a nutrient-rich fertiliser or mulch for your garden. Its easy to make and use. Everybody can compost no matter how limited your outdoor space might be. Compost bins are perfect for even the smallest of backyards, while worm farms t perfectly on patios or in garages. Worm farms can recycle:
99 9 vegetable scraps (except for onions, leeks, garlic and chillies) 9 tea bags and coffee grounds 9 egg shells.
Establishing a worm farm is a great family activity that your children will love. Get the kids involved by playing Worm World (available free for iPads). See page 13 for details. Brisbanes best recycling guide for households
9 fruit and vegetable scraps (even onions and citrus) 9 tea bags and coffee grounds 9 egg shells 9 grass clippings and straw 9 other garden waste, including prunings and shrubs 9 manure from herbivores i.e. cows, horses and sheep (no cat or
dog manure)
9 pet hair 9 vacuum cleaner contents 9 wood ash and untreated sawdust.
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Recycling organics
Green waste recycling bins
Green waste recycling bins are an easy and affordable way to compost your garden waste. Green waste recycling bins are collected fortnightly from your home and the green waste is taken to a green waste recycling facility where it is processed into compost and mulch. Recycling your lawn clippings, palm fronds, prunings and leaves saves valuable organic resources from going to landll while helping to create a more sustainable, green and clean city. If you have large volumes of green waste that wont t in a 240 litre wheelie bin, why not consider using one of Brisbanes local businesses who operate a garden bag collection service. Visit www.gardenbaggroup.com.au for more information.
A green waste bin is available for only $17.94 a quarter, with a one-off establishment fee of $30.
To order your new green waste recycling bin visit www.brisbane.qld.gov.au or call Council now on (07) 3403 8888.
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Business recycling
Let your customers know that your business cares about the environment.
Council has taken all the hard work out of recycling in the workplace with the new co-mingled recycling bins for businesses. Its now simple to recycle paper, cardboard, glass, metal and plastic all in one bin! A co-mingled recycling bin for your business will also: save you time by having all of your recycling in one bin reduce the clutter of bins at the back of your shop or ofce reduce the carbon footprint of your business reduce waste to landll.
Call Council on (07) 3403 8888 or visit www.brisbane.qld.gov.au/waste to place an order or for more information.
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Visy Recycling
www.visy.com.au/recycling 1300 368 479
Brisbane City Council Information GPO Box 1434 Brisbane Qld 4001