UK 'could adopt Norway recycling system'
A Scandinavian system for recycling bottles is thought likely to be adopted in the UK. Advisers to government say the schemes have massively reduced plastic litter in the environment and seas. And a ministerial delegation has been to Norway to see if the UK should copy an industry-led scheme that recycles 98% of bottles. In the UK, figures show that only around half of all plastic bottles get recycled.
Norway claims to offer the most cost-efficient way of tackling plastic litter. The Norwegian government decided the best method would be to put a tax on every bottle that's not recycled - then leave the operating details of the scheme up to business.
It works like this: the consumer pays a deposit on every bottle, from 10p to 25p depending on size. They return it empty and post it into a machine which reads the barcode and produces a coupon for the deposit. If the careless consumer has left liquid in the bottle, the machine eats it anyway - but hands the deposit to the shopkeeper who'll need to empty the bottle.
Similar schemes are in operation in other Nordic nations, Germany, and some states in the US and Canada.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 07 2018, @07:09PM (1 child)
Had that experience in NYS. Come to the store with a bag full of sticky beer bottles and coke cans, and half of them are arbitrarily rejected by the machine, leaving you to pick out the sticky bottle again and doing something with it. I guess I just left them next to the machine?
(Score: 2) by frojack on Wednesday February 07 2018, @07:23PM
How does a beer bottle get sticky?
Never mind, I don't want to know.
But you bring up a good point. Even with diligent curbside recycling, consumers are expected to clean the items, maybe a quick rinse, maybe with soap. The (sometimes hot) water costs alone exceed the return on deposit.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.