Four common office recycling mistakes

The Paper Recycling Association of South Africa (PRASA) outlines some of the more common recycling blunders with some helpful tips to make sure that paper and board get to where they need to be

It is estimated that only 8% of businesses recycle their used paper and board. And even the most well-intentioned recyclers make mistakes.

The Paper Recycling Association of South Africa (PRASA) outlines some of the more common recycling blunders with some helpful tips to make sure that paper and board get to where they need to be: to recycling companies in a good, clean state so they can be reprocessed and made into new paper products.

Mistake 1: Putting non-recyclable paper products into the recycling bin

Even though they are made of paper, a number of items are not suitable for recycling: dirty paper plates, cigarette butts, tissue and toilet paper, paper towel, sticky notes, carbon paper, foil-lined, wax-coated and laminated papers, cement and dog food bags.

These items cannot be recycled owing to the contamination or non-recyclability of certain elements or ‘stickies’ like waxes, foils, laminates and glues.

How to correct this:

 

Mistake 2: Food contamination

Wet waste ends up in the paper recycling bin – this includes used food waste, cigarette butts and soiled take-away containers. This contaminates the paper and reduces its value. Paper also starts to degrade once wet.

How to correct this:

Mistake 3: Making it difficult and time-consuming for employees to recycle

We are all human. Nobody likes to walk too far to throw something away.

How to correct this:

A study showed that paper recycling rose from 28% with one bin per office to 94% when paper trays were located on desks.

Mistake 4: Not knowing what to do with your recyclables

Your office has collected all this paper that it doesn’t know what to do with, and after a while, it all ends up in the general rubbish.

How to correct these mistakes:

 

Other ways to boost your company’s recycling efforts

Know the benefits of recycling

Every business likes to be better at reducing its environmental footprint. Knowing and sharing the benefits of your paper recycling efforts will help each person strive to do more.

  1. Diversion of valuable raw material from landfill – A tonne of recycled paper can save up to three cubic metres of landfill space and is used to make new paper products that we use every day.
  2. Cleaner air – Paper buried in a landfill after mixing with other waste will degrade and release gases such as methane, which is 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide.
  3. Job creation – Big and small companies as well as informal collectors make money (and employ people) through the recovery and processing of clean, quality recyclable paper.
  4. Feel-good factor – Staff feel more environmentally aware and responsible. Businesses who recycle and embrace a ‘green mandate’ have shown an increased ability to recruit and retain good employees. *
  5. It’s the right thing to do.

With a paper recovery rate of 64%, South Africa has been trending upwards towards a goal of 70% by 2020 for past few years.

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