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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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Zdroj/Source: Bottle Bills in the News |
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"You cannot go anywhere these days without seeing someone carrying a bottle of water. They are a staple of every day life, but unfortunately, also a staple of everyday littering," Gov. Rell said. "For almost 30 years, our bottle bill has kept billions of bottles and cans of soda or beer from our landfills. Now we can build on that success by diverting even more plastic out of our waste stream. This new law is now reflective of modern times and the incredible popularity and consumption of bottled water. It makes absolute environmental sense." Adding on water bottles and other non-carbonated beverages to the bill is the first major change in the history of the state's bottle bill, established almost three decades ago. The law is intended to keep hundreds of millions of non-biodegradable plastic bottles out of the state's landfills and into the recycling stream where they can be reused for other products. The state Department of Environmental Protection estimates that 500 million water bottles are sold in Connecticut each year. While the expanded bottle bill was approved by the Legislature and signed by the Governor in February, it does not become law until October 1, 2009. Unclaimed deposits - called escheats - will return an estimated $17 million in water bottle purchases to the state. The original "bottle bill" took effect in Connecticut on January 1, 1980. It required a five cent deposit on bottles or cans of beer, soda and other carbonated beverages. The new law exempts water bottles or other non-carbonated water beverage products in containers three liters or larger, containers made from high density polyethylene and containers produced by manufacturers who bottle and sell less than 250,000 non-carbonated beverage containers a year and who obtain an exemption from DEP.
"A generation of Connecticut residents has grown up with recycling as the law of the land. They've learned to pick up, pack up and properly dispose of bottles and cans," Gov. Rell said. "Adding water bottles to the recycling mix instead of our landfills is a natural move." For more information on the new bottle bill and recycling in Connecticut, visit www.ct.gov/dep and click on the Materials and Waste Management link. Source: http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=20376459&BRD=1379&PAG=461&dept_id=162912&rfi=6
Some important related links on www.petrecycling.cz:
and many others..... files section: 2008 > 2007 > 2006 > 2005 > 2004 > 2003 > 2002 > 2001Archives in files section Nové/News: 2008 > 2007 > 2006 > 2005 > 2004 > 2003 > 2002 > 2001 > 2000
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