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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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Posted: Tue Aug 16, 05 8:45 am Post subject: BBC Breakfast News Story about Recycling |
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Guy on the BBC this morning extolling the virtues of recycling, going through a recyclng box to say what might happen to the materials there in. He talked about how a plastic bottle might end up keeping us warm as part of a fleece, fair enough I thought, but why not use it as a bottle? Then he pulled out a tin can and talked about it becoming another tin can or part of a bit of machinery. Okay, thinks I, can't do much else with it. Then out comes a wine bottle, and he said that it could become another wine bottle and that recycling it was therefore obviously worthwhile... Or, better yet, it could become the sand in a golf course bunker!
For pities sake...
Ther R's, reduce, reuse and recycle, in that order. We could, of course, take sand, melt it down, make a bottle, then grind up the bottle for sand. Or we could take a bottle, melt it down and make another bottle.
Or, we could seriously address the energy issue here and take the bottle, and use it again as a bottle!
Shop shelves are full of hundreds of designs of bottle, they're all SLIGHTLY different. Why not have, say, a dozen designs? Standardise them across Europe, and re-use them? How hard can that be? Why do we persist with the crazy practice of melting something down to make it again before we wake up?
Same goes for plastics, packing material and suchlike. Why are we composting cardboard boxes rather than reusing them? Why are we manufacturing millions of plastic bottles and then recycling them rathter than using simple, re-useable containers? |
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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wellington womble
Joined: 08 Nov 2004 Posts: 15051 Location: East Midlands
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Behemoth
Joined: 01 Dec 2004 Posts: 19023 Location: Leeds
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bagpuss
Joined: 09 Dec 2004 Posts: 10507 Location: cambridge
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judith
Joined: 16 Dec 2004 Posts: 22789 Location: Montgomeryshire
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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@Calli
Joined: 03 Jul 2005 Posts: 1682 Location: Galway
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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Posted: Tue Aug 16, 05 9:38 am Post subject: |
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cab wrote: |
Because light fittings are still compatible with crap light bulbs, and because the crap ones aren't priced according to their environmental damage. Go back to the example of car parts, your example that Behemoth was commenting on (and I was answering), a truly innovative change that is better than the existing component would replace the older components as newly constructed vehicles replaced older ones. |
I don't think the fittings has anything to do with it, unless you forced people to put eco only fittings in new homes.
What I'm saying in both cases is the commercial realities get in the way, an eco light bulb is a fantastic innovation, but people don't care enough to fit them in their houses.
Take ABS in cars, it's great and it saves lives, but many cars are still sold without it as standard.
Going back to the bottle thing, great idea but coke will never agree to it. As you pointed out with the environmental aspect of light bulbs, we need legislation to push these things through.
I guess one of the problems was the advent of plastic bottles which did away with the deposit on glass ones, we should bring that back. |
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wellington womble
Joined: 08 Nov 2004 Posts: 15051 Location: East Midlands
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cab
Joined: 01 Nov 2004 Posts: 32429
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Posted: Tue Aug 16, 05 9:42 am Post subject: |
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Jonnyboy wrote: |
I don't think the fittings has anything to do with it, unless you forced people to put eco only fittings in new homes.
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I was hinting at that, yes.
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What I'm saying in both cases is the commercial realities get in the way, an eco light bulb is a fantastic innovation, but people don't care enough to fit them in their houses.
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That's enturely true, because the cost of lightbulbs isn't related to environmental cost of using them. The sensible environmental approach would be to change that.
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Take ABS in cars, it's great and it saves lives, but many cars are still sold without it as standard.
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Think of it in terms of the standard car components argument; suppose ABS were required as standard in new vehicles? How would that change things? Would that in any way inhibit new innovation?
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Going back to the bottle thing, great idea but coke will never agree to it. As you pointed out with the environmental aspect of light bulbs, we need legislation to push these things through.
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Then coke can stick their bottles where the sun doesn't shine Really, they aren't the only company to haver distinctive containers, and the commercial interests of a few do not outweigh the environmental beefits.
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I guess one of the problems was the advent of plastic bottles which did away with the deposit on glass ones, we should bring that back. |
I agree wholeheartedly. |
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Jonnyboy
Joined: 29 Oct 2004 Posts: 23956 Location: under some rain.
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