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PETrecycling CZ is non-commercial, independent, free & unsponsored Czech
web portal for funs, communities, administrative, law-makers, politicians,
PET plastic industry etc. in the Czech Republic.
My closing statement read:
"There is only one real effective and incentive method to encourage
environmentally sound collecting of beverage one-way containers and it is
deposit in combination with High-Tech R&D resulted Reverse Vending
Machines! |
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NCSE | 1101 17th Street NW, Suite 250 | Washington, DC 20036 | Phone:
00-1 202-530-5810 | Fax: 00-1 202-628-4311 | info@NCSEonline.org
SUMMARY
In recent years, both curbside collection and
deposit/refund (or "bottle bill") programs have been used to collect materials
for recycling. In 1991, both served about 30% of the U.S. population. Along with
many other measures, both methods may have a role to play in a comprehensive
recycling program. Neither method excludes the use of the other. Nevertheless,
many wish to compare the merits of the two systems as alternatives. This report
compares the merits of curbside and deposit programs in three respects: amount
of material collected; quality of material collected; and financial aspects.
The report concludes that:
- Comparisons between the two systems are
difficult to make. Key data (such as the cost of collecting materials) are
often not publicly available and can be greatly affected by methodological
assumptions.
- The two methods are not designed to serve
exactly the same purposes. In addition to promoting recycling, deposit-refund
systems reduce litter generation and make possible the use of refillable
beverage containers. Curbside programs, on the other hand, can target a wider
range of materials than a deposit system, and thus have the potential to
achieve a greater diversion of waste for recycling.
- Curbside programs are more common in deposit
States than in non-deposit States: 43% of the population has access to
curbside recycling in deposit States, versus 22% of the population in non-deposit
States. Thus, enactment of a bottle bill does not appear to prevent operation
of curbside programs.
- Deposit systems collect more of their target
materials than do curbside programs. Return rates in deposit systems range
from 72% to 98%. The best curbside programs collect
less than 70% of the
targeted material -- in many cases, substantially less.
- Because the bottles and cans are sorted and
handled individually when returned to retailers, the materials collected by
deposit systems are generally of a higher quality than curbside materials,
particularly if the latter are commingled during collection.
- Deposit-refund systems cost more to operate
on a per-ton-collected basis. These additional costs are internalized in
product prices. Curbside systems, while costing less, depend on tax revenues,
making the ability to maintain or expand levels of curbside service dependent
on local government budgets.
- Deposit systems "skim" potential sources of
revenue from curbside programs, but they also reduce operating costs of
curbside collection and processing.
- Studies suggest that local governments would
achieve a greater diversion of solid waste from disposal at a lower cost per
ton if both a bottle bill and a curbside collection program were in place.

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