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!
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!


WRAP: CO2 impacts of transporting the UK’s
recovered paper and plastic bottles to China

The PETrecycling.cz assessment based on R&D up-to-day results is, that it should be made clear, that all beverage containers, e.g. PET bottles, ALU cans and glass bottles, that are commercially imported into Czech Republic or sold here should be included in return systems with deposits - to encourage the consumers to take the bottles back

Zdroj/SourceEU-Recycling RSS feed Shipping to China is better than sending to UK landfill (21.8.2008 11.06 Uhr)
 

Logo portálu PETrecycling.cz


HOME Archive 2008 23.08.2008 WRAP: CO2 impacts of transporting the UK’s recovered paper and plastic bottles to China
 

Úvodem/Editorial

Archivy/Archives

Je PC-PET láhev"odpad"?

TERMINOLOGICKÝ SLOVNÍČEK

Co je IP PETrecycling.cz

Recyklace PET lahví

Kvalita RPET pro potraviny

Důvody pro zálohování nápojových obalů

Proč odběr PET automaty RVM místo popelnic?

Přehled o recyklaci PET metodou B2B ("bottle to bottle")

Informace o zařízeních pro sběr a recyklaci PET lahví

Zálohy na nápojové obaly v Německu

Zálohy na Slovensku

O zálohách v Česku

Recyklační firmy - ČR, SR

Ze směsných plastů nafta

Nové dilema - BIOPLASTY

LCA a CBA

Plastic Rumors and Myth - Explained

Hledej na WWW
Na úřad přes internet - Portál veřejné správy České republiky
Nejobsáhlejší SEZNAM Slovník
Počítač je chráněn antivirus systémem NOD32
Global sites
More articles in English only


A new WRAP study has found that selling the UK’s used plastic bottles and paper for recycling in China actually saves carbon emissions. Shipping these materials more than 10,000 miles produces less CO2 than sending them to landfill at home and using brand new materials.


The transport issue is just one factor in assessing the environmental impact of exporting materials for recycling. However, it has become increasingly important to understand, as over the last ten years exports of used paper have risen from 470,000 tonnes to 4.7 million tonnes. Exports of used plastic bottles have gone from less than 40,000 tonnes to half a million tonnes over the same period. This increase reflects the huge rise in household recycling in the UK from 7 percent to over 30 percent during that time.

We collect more paper than we can recycle, but there is strong demand for it from growing economies, such as China, where there are not enough trees to make paper. Plastic bottles are also much in demand from China’s manufacturing industry and there is currently insufficient capacity in the UK to reprocess them here. This study shows it is environmentally less harmful to send that material to China for reprocessing than sending it to landfill in the UK.

This study sought to answer the specific question of whether the CO2 emissions from the transport outweighed the benefits of the recycling. It quantifies the CO2 emissions from transporting one tonne of recovered mixed paper or recovered plastic (PET/HDPE) bottles to China. It assumes that the carbon savings of recycling in China are similar to those identified in other countries, including the UK.

The study showed that the emissions caused by transporting the material to China account for only a small amount - on average less than a third – of the CO2 saved by recycling. However, due to the imbalance of trade between China and the UK, the majority of container ships head back to China empty and they are producing CO2 emissions whether or not they are carrying cargo. If you take this into account, the transport emissions are even smaller - less than one-tenth of the overall amount of CO2 saved by recycling.

Liz Goodwin, CEO, WRAP, said: “It may seem strange that transporting our unwanted paper and plastic bottles such a distance would actually be better for the environment but that is what the evidence from this study shows. “As more and more of this material is being sold to China we wanted to know the impact that was having on the environment, and specifically whether the CO2 emissions from the transport outweighed the benefits of the recycling. “Although this study is only part of the environmental impact story, it is clear that there are significant CO2 savings that can be made by shipping our unwanted paper and plastic to China. In some cases, we just aren’t able to reprocess everything we collect or there isn’t enough of it to do so. In these cases, shipping it to China, which has a high demand and need for material, makes sense in CO2 terms.

The report can be found at online under www.wrap.org.uk - title "CO2 impacts of transporting the UK’s recovered paper and plastic bottles to China" (PDF, 29 p.)

Source: WRAP

Related external link(s): WRAP Report Touts Effectiveness of Scrap Paper, Plastic Exports, where you can read:

This study is not a Life Cycle Analysis, although it forms a necessary part of the evidence base to demonstrate that exporting the material to China is environmentally sustainable. To answer this question in full, further work on the relative environmental impacts of recycling processes in China and the UK would be required.

 

 

empty (?) - really poor nonsense

Related:

Archive in More articles in English only files section: > 2007 > 2006 > 2005 > 2004 > 2003 > 2002 > 2001

Archive in files section Nové/News: 2007 > 2006 > 2005 > 2004  > 2003 > 2002 > 2001 > 2000


 

  Best View : 800x600 resolution with Internet Explorer 4.x or above.