
Ho appena letto questo articolo e mi sono reso conto che non riesco a capire perché gli imballaggi in plastica non siano stati riciclati fino ad ora. Cosa c’è di così difficile che l’UE abbia già risolto?
How come plastic packaging recycling was not a thing here?
byu/PieceRough inSwitzerland
di PieceRough
8 commenti
Dont we recycle some of these (mainly shampoo and cleaners) at coop/migros? Will we finally be able to recycle milk kartons and tetrapak? Will it be a kunstoff container like Germany?
Because plastic is not plastic.
E.g. A The Tetra Pak pack contains a total of six layers in this order: polyethylene, paperboard, polyethylene, aluminum foil, polyethylene and polyethylene.
To be able to recycle it, you have to be able to separate it industrially. And some plastics contain harmful additives.
Plastic was once oil, if we burn it and use the heat for something useful its not wasted.
https://baug.ethz.ch/en/news-and-events/news/2024/03/blog-recycling-plastic-is-not-a-quick-fix.html
The EU hasn’t sorted it out. The Netherlands is the least bad at it with [7% being recycled](https://www.rivm.nl/en/news/recycled-plastic-packaging-in-netherlands-still-falls-short). [The rest](https://hollandbioplastics.nl/actueel/de-ontnuchterende-waarheid-over-plastic-recycling/) either ends up as trash, is stored indefinitely in a warehouse or is sent to Asia to disappear.
Im so extremely duspicious of that. Plastics are notoriously hard to recycle since they are made up of different extremely long molecules that love sticking together, so it takes a lot of energy to split them up, that’s also why there are the different types of plastic(Hdpe, Pet,…), which already were being “recycled”. From what I’ve heard they are mostly collected and then later burned, since no one uses them properly, but that may be outdated information.
Dome countried also have landfills, which, really isn’t much better.
Because plastic recycling is really not worth much with some exceptions, and gives a false sense of reducing waste.
In a system like the Swiss one, where waste is incinerated, allowing plastic in waste is not a bad solution (compared to landfills for example).
The main exception is PET plastic, which is pretty valuable when recycled.
Second best the hard plastic of shampoo/detergents. It won’t become good plastic anymore, but it could be used for some low grade plastic products like solid toys, insulation, benches, etc.
Everything else is basically trash despite the effort of packaging companies to pretend it’s recyclable. Almost a scam. Starting from the “resin identification code” that is suspiciously similar to the recycling symbol but doesn’t mean anything in terms of recyclability. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resin_identification_code
In short, it is annoying to see that plastic is trash, but it is. Buy less plastic if you want to throw away less plastic.
Something seems off with the article. Do they only mean Tetra Pak by “plastic”? Because PET has had very high recycling rates for years, and PE is also recyclable in most supermarkets since many years.
Some types of plastic are not great to recycle (loss of material and high energy cost), so it’s just as well to burn them for energy recovery when you have decently clean incineration.
Sounds like another money scheme that will simply ship trash to other countries so they can claim it‘s being recycled.
Where is the evidence about the EU and how they sorted it out?