born at 321.89 PPM CO2

"Quality is never an accident. It is always the result of intelligent effort." - John Ruskin

Saturday, 2 May 2026

(XIN) DEPOSIT RETURN SCHEME - CHINESE STYLE

People work at Huge Recycle, a company handling household waste recovery and recycling, in Hangzhou, east China's Zhejiang Province, Jan. 14, 2026. (Xinhua/Jiang Han)

Scanning a code, opening a hatch, and tossing in bottles, Yuan Meirong completes the recycling process in less than 10 seconds. With a ding, 0.8 yuan (11.6 U.S. cents) is credited to her account.

"It's so convenient," said the resident from Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province, gesturing at a smart recycling bin. "Now I can easily recycle delivery boxes and bottles for a little reward. It's fun."

Operated by the internet recycling firm Lovere, the smart bin is one of 870 units deployed across nearly 400 residential communities in Hangzhou's Xihu District since its July 2024 pilot launch.

Residents can enter a phone number or scan a QR code to recycle items such as plastic bottles, cardboard, old clothes, and takeout containers. The bin automatically weighs the items and pays about 0.6 yuan per kg directly to the user's account.

More than a mere convenience, the bins demonstrate how technology is monetizing waste streams across Chinese cities, transforming passive disposal into people's active participation in the circular economy. Since deploying the smart bins, recyclable-sorting accuracy has reached 98.5 percent, with monthly recycling volume averaging 1,000 tonnes, said Zhang Yixiang, Lovere's Hangzhou chief.

The company has placed over 50,000 bins in 38 cities and has recycled 2 million tonnes for 30 million users. In Xihu District alone, residents have used the bins 2.58 million times, receiving 4.2 million yuan in total. The top user recycled 9 tonnes, earning 5,400 yuan, according to the company. Zhang Kang, Lovere's Hangzhou operations head, said the sensors trigger pickups only when bins are full, and an automated sorting center categorizes materials into more than 80 types for sale.

"With scale, the business is expected to become profitable," he said. The Communist Party of China Central Committee's recommendations for formulating the 15th Five-Year Plan (2026-2030) for the country's economic and social development propose promoting a circular economy.

At Xianyu, a leading second-hand trading platform of China's internet giant Alibaba, 7 million used items were listed on average every day in 2025, with daily trading volume up 30 percent year on year. "Every transaction is users' participation in a green lifestyle," said Ding Jian, the platform's CEO.

From April 2024 to March 2025, Xianyu users reduced carbon emissions by 11.8 million tonnes through trading and recycling -- equivalent to the annual electricity consumption of 7.4 million households, Ding said. According to the China Association of Circular Economy, the circular economy accounted for about 30 percent of the country's carbon reduction from 2021 to 2025, and this share is expected to rise to 35 percent by 2030.

In Hangzhou's Yuhang District, resident Chai Yuyong praised "Huge," a door-to-door recycling service, which collected his old sofa and table for free in 20 minutes. 
Residents place orders via an app, and a worker arrives within an hour to collect, weigh and pay for items such as old appliances. "Living on a high floor, I found it a hassle to dispose of the bulky old furniture by myself. Now, with just a tap on my phone, they come to collect and carry them for free. It's a real relief," Chai said.

Hu Shaoping, vice president of the company Huge Recycle, said that over the past 10 years, the company has built an end-to-end chain from household collection to sorting, dismantling and resource reuse. 
The service offers transparent pricing for used appliances of different sizes. Residents are paid in "green coins," which can be redeemed for cash or spent at Huge's online mall, further driving green consumption.

To date, the company has issued nearly 500 million yuan in green coins. Xu Lin, a professor at Zhejiang University, noted that smart technology has made recycling and green consumption as simple as a phone scan. These small actions, he said, show how the public has moved from being told what to do to taking the lead in the circular economy. More of this article (XINHUANET) link - more like this (DRS) - link - more like this (China) - link

(BBC) COUNCIL REJECTS ELECTRIC

Wakefield Council has been trialling using an electric rubbish collection truck

A council has announced plans to replace its "ageing" bin lorries with a new fleet of diesel vehicles after attempts to go electric were unsuccessful.

Wakefield Council began trialling an electric rubbish collection vehicle four years ago as part of efforts to become a carbon neutral authority.

But Lou Redpath, the council's service director for environmental services, told a meeting that manufacturers had been unable to find "anything sustainable enough" to allow the council to switch to an electric fleet long-term.

Members of the council's environment scrutiny committee described the move as "disappointing", especially during the ongoing global fuel shortage. 
The council declared a climate emergency in May 2019 and pledged to be fully carbon neutral by 2030. In 2022, senior councillors agreed to spend £4.9m to introduce zero-emission battery electric vehicles (BEVs) and an additional £1m on charging infrastructure.

At the time, a report said about 12% of the authority's greenhouse gas emissions were produced by its fleet of 1,100 cars, vans and other equipment.

The document also said bin wagons and gritters would continue to use diesel due to "uncertainties with technology and performance" of larger vehicles, but pledged to keep trialling an electric refuse vehicle. More of this article (BBC) - link - more like this (Council waste EVs) - link - more like this (electric waste vehicles) - link - more like this (Carbon Neutral) - link

(GUF) THE WASTE FILES

THE WASTE FILES – THE MANIFESTO - By Guff House

What is this going to be?

Wastipedia (or whatever I end up calling it) is/will be a free, open and evolving library of practical waste management knowledge built from over forty years of real-world experience existing for one simple reason: to make waste management clearer, more accurate and more honest.

• No subscriptions.
• No gatekeeping.
• No pretending theory works when it doesn’t.


Why it's needed

Too much of this industry runs on outdated guidance, misinterpreted legislation (That’s how we’ve always done it”) and the occasional confident guess dressed up as fact. Somewhere between legislation, operations and procurement, things get muddled. Wastipedia (or whatever) will exist to un-muddle them.

What you’ll find here

Documents that answer real questions, such as:

• What is this waste actually classified as?
• Can this really be recycled — or is that wishful thinking?
• What should I be buying if I want to avoid disposal problems later?
• What does the legislation say… and what actually happens on site?


Each document is/will be designed to be practical, clear, usable under pressure and grounded in reality, not theory.

The Principle: Reality Over Rhetoric

Every piece of content will follow one rule - if it doesn’t work in the real world, it doesn’t belong here. Where there’s a gap between guidance and practice, we will say so. Clearly, honestly and without dressing it up.

Open to Correction – Not Open to Chaos

Wastipedia (whatever) will never be static. If something is wrong, outdated, incomplete or could be improved, you are invited to challenge it; and as long as you can back it up (guidance, regs or real operational experience), keeping it practical, constructive, every document will be versioned, reviewed and updated where necessary. Contributors who improve content can be credited (if they wish) because accuracy matters and so does accountability.

What this is not going to be

Wastipedia will not be:

• A marketing exercise
• A compliance box-ticking tool
• A place for vague sustainability claims


Who it’s going to be for

Anyone who has ever stood in front of a bin thinking: “Right… what actually happens to this?”

My aim

To build something people can rely on. Not because it looks good but because it’s right.

Built from experience - Improved by those still doing the job - Open to challenge - closed to nonsense.

If you know something - add to it.
If you see something wrong - fix it.
If you’ve ever questioned how this industry works -  you’re in the right place.

More like this (The Waste Files) - link - more like this (legislation) - link - more like this (knowledge) - link

(NAT) WORLD'S LARGEST REDOX FLOW


Energy firm FlexBase is building a giant battery in this pit in northern Switzerland

In northern Switzerland, a construction team is hard at work excavating a hole in the ground that will end up being over 88 ft (27 m) deep, and spanning the length of two soccer pitches. This pit will be home to Switzerland's first redox flow battery for storing clean energy – and it'll be the most powerful of its kind in the world.

The idea is to utilize a storage technology that's nearly 150 years old to prevent blackouts, and help stabilize Swiss and European power grids in times of fluctuating demand. It's being built by Swiss energy company FlexBase, and the project is set to cost over a billion dollars.

"We will be able to inject or absorb up to 1.2 gigawatt-hours (GWh) of electricity in a few milliseconds," FlexBase co-founder Marcel Aumer told Swiss public broadcaster RTS earlier this month. That's equivalent to the output of the Leibstadt nuclear power plant located in the same region, near the German border. The giant battery will be fed with excess energy generated by windmills.

The tech theoretically dates back to 1879, and was modernized through NASA research between the 1950s and 70s. While lithium-ion batteries are more common and have improved and become more affordable, they're mostly suitable for short-term energy storage. Redox flow batteries are a better choice for long-term, grid-scale storage – and FlexBase says the various components needed for them, like tanks, membranes, cell stacks and pumps, have become cheaper as the industry has matured in recent years.

A redox flow battery works by storing energy in liquid electrolytes. Two chemical components that are high in water content are stored in large tanks, and pumped through a cell with a membrane separating them. When the battery is charging, ions transfer through the membrane from the positive to the negative side – changing the oxidation state and storing energy indefinitely. The opposite reaction occurs when it's discharging, and these charge cycles are inert. More of this article from the brilliant (New Atlas) - link - more like this (Redox flow) - link - more like this (Switzerland) - link

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

(REF) LIFE AFTER THE MANHATTAN PROJECT


The Hanford D and DR Reactors circa 1955, next to the Columbia River

A nuclear production facility in Washington state, called the Hanford site, once forged the plutonium that reshaped the world. Now it’s forging glass; a quiet act of undoing at one of Earth’s most contaminated sites.

Eighty years ago, at the height of World War II, the Hanford site forged the plutonium that would help end the war and usher in a new atomic era. Now the site is forging glass, each glowing canister a quiet reversal of that legacy. After years of anticipation, the US Department of Energy (DOE) has finally begun vitrifying Hanford’s nuclear waste, sealing it forever inside glass logs that mark the first real progress in cleaning one of Earth’s most contaminated nuclear sites.

During World War II and throughout the Cold War, the Hanford reactors along the Columbia River near Richland, Washington produced most of the plutonium in the US arsenal of bombs and missiles, leaving behind 56 million gallons of radioactive sludge stored in 177 aging underground tanks. For decades the waste lingered beneath desert soil, threatening to leach into the river that defines the region.
Now, the new vitrification facility, a US$10-billion engineering project built to immobilize that high-level waste in glass, has turned its first 5,500 liters into inert, permanent canisters.

Growing Up Beside a Closed World

As someone who grew up in the region, the weight of this story lands a little different. The Hanford site was always part of the landscape, even if it rarely came up in conversation. A place marked by long roads, distant fences, and the kind of silence that makes you wonder what has soaked into the ground. For decades, the story of Hanford – its scale, its secrecy, its consequences – was something I felt around the edges without ever fully understanding.

The Manhattan Project, that secret wartime race to develop the first atomic weapon, built Hanford with a speed that only a wartime effort can summon. Its reactors rose from the desert with unprecedented urgency, producing the plutonium that fueled both the Trinity test and the bomb dropped on Nagasaki. Plutonium production continued throughout the Cold War into the 1980s, long after World War II ended, leaving behind a legacy far larger and more complex than anyone working behind those fences could have imagined. It was a project defined by speed and secrecy; its waste was never intended for long-term storage. More of this article (refractor) - link - Chelsea Haney (author) - link - more like this (nuclear) - link - More like this (Washington State) - link

Monday, 27 April 2026

(ICN) CORAL REEFS UNDER ATTACK FROM SEWAGE


Researchers survey bleached corals around Koh Tao island in the southern Thai province of Surat Thani on June 14, 2024. Credit: Lillian Suwanrumpha/AFP via Getty Images

Marine protected areas are designed to conserve coral reefs and other ocean ecosystems by restricting human activity within their boundaries. But most don’t account for one of the most severe and widespread threats to marine life that originates on land: sewage.

A new study by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) and the University of Queensland in Australia found that more than 70 percent of marine protected areas worldwide are contaminated by untreated, or poorly treated, wastewater.

In places with extensive coral reefs, like the Coral Triangle—a 2 million square mile marine area spanning six countries in Southeast Asia, including Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea—contamination is even more widespread.

According to the study, published this month in the journal Ocean & Coastal Management, more than 90 percent of coastal protected areas in the Coral Triangle are affected by high levels of sewage pollution—up to 10 times highter than in nearby unprotected waters.

“What we found was striking,” said David E. Carrasco Rivera, the study’s lead author and a doctoral candidate at the University of Queensland. “In region after region, the areas set aside for conservation were actually receiving more pollution than the areas with no protection at all.”

Many marine protected areas are established near coastlines to help fragile and overburdened ecosystems that people depend on for food, tourism and livelihoods recover, rebuild and thrive. But their nearshore locations make them particularly vulnerable to contamination that can undermine their purpose, said Amelia Wenger, co-author of the study and global water pollution lead at the Wildlife Conservation Society, a global nonprofit dedicated to protecting wildlife, based at the Bronx Zoo in New York.

“Even a perfectly managed marine protected area will fail to achieve benefits for conservation and for people if wastewater keeps flowing in from upstream,” she said. More of this article (Inside Climate News) - link - more like this (reefs) - link - more like this (sewage) - link - more like this (Queensland) - link

(GUF) CIRCULAR GUIDANCE NOTES

Introducing the Circular Guidance Note (CGN) Series

Waste guidance often arrives as dense policy, technical jargon or worthy slogans that tell people what they should do, but rarely explain why it matters in practice.

The Circular Guidance Note (CGN) Series is my attempt to do something simpler. Each CGN takes one practical issue — from reusable pallets, to purchasing decisions, to soft plastics — and strips it back to common sense.
  • Not theory
  • Not greenwash
  • Just practical circular thinking
The idea behind the series is straightforward: Waste does not begin at the bin.

It often begins much earlier; in design, procurement, packaging choices and behaviours that quietly create costs and environmental impacts downstream. The first three Circular Guidance Notes reflect that progression:

CGN 01 – Wooden Pallets Are Reusable Packaging, Not Someone Else’s Waste

A reminder that reusable assets abandoned on site are not “free waste disposal,” but a cost shifted elsewhere in the supply chain - test - link - draft copy for trial only.

CGN 02 – If You Bring It In – We Have To Deal With It 


A challenge to think about waste before it exists, and recognise that purchasing choices shape disposal costs - test - link - draft copy for trial only

CGN 03 – Soft Plastics: The Next Wave

A look ahead at one of the most problematic and important materials in the circular economy transition.

Together they share one simple principle: The bin does not make something recyclable. Buying choices do. These notes are designed to be practical, visual and shareable — for workplaces, campuses, laboratories, public estates or anywhere waste and procurement collide. More like this (biomass) - link - more like this (recycling) - link - more like this (soft plastics) - link

More will follow.
  • Less wishcycling.
  • More thinking.
  • Welcome to the Circular Guidance Note Series.
Coming Soon — Free CGN Downloads

Guff House is building a free download library of Circular Guidance Notes (CGNs) — practical, printable guidance sheets designed to turn circular economy theory into common sense.

From pallets and plastic films to procurement, recycling and greenwash-busting, each CGN is designed to be used, shared and adapted.
  • No consultancy jargon.
  • No mystical sustainability waffle.
  • Just guidance that works.
Free PDF library launching soon.

Sunday, 26 April 2026

(MOT) MINNEAPOLIS 'TRASH' HUNGER STRIKE


Minneapolis activists, including Nazir Khan (above), went on hunger strike over burning trash.Courtesy of Geoff Dittberner/Zero Burn Coalition

Is America quietly moving away from waste incineration?

It may be. The number of municipal waste incinerators in the United States has reportedly fallen from nearly 200 in the 1990s to around 73 today — a significant long-term decline driven by cost pressures, tighter emissions controls, environmental justice campaigns and resistance to building new facilities.

Yet the story is more complicated than simple closure numbers suggest. While the number of plants has fallen, burning capacity has not necessarily dropped at the same rate, raising questions about whether America is truly reducing reliance on incineration — or merely concentrating it.

The controversy surrounding Minneapolis’ HERC facility, highlighted in Mother Jones, captures that wider debate: public health, pollution, overcapacity, and whether the future lies in burning waste… or designing it out altogether. Read the article (Mother Jones) - link - more like this (protest) - link - more like this (Minneapolis) - link - more like this (waste incineration) - link

(GUF) THE EIGHT WASTES

We tend to treat waste as something that appears in a bin. Lean thinking says otherwise. Waste begins much earlier; in process design, procurement decisions, unnecessary motion, defects and overproduction.

This first note in the Guff House Circular Thinking Series explores the classic Eight Wastes through a circular economy lens. More like this (circular economy) - link - more like this (containers) - link

Saturday, 25 April 2026

(GUF) WHAT IS pEPR SUPPOSED TO DO?

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs’s pEPR model is intended to shift costs upstream so producers pay the full net cost of managing packaging waste. The theory is simple - make difficult to recycle packaging more expensive to place on the market through modulated fees; hard-to-recycle composites, laminates, problematic plastics etc. should attract higher charges.

Rewarding better design

Everyone agrees that packaging that's reusable, easily recyclable or designed for disassembly should attract lower fees and push reduction, not just recycling. In theory, once producers face real costs, they should reduce unnecessary packaging and move away from low value single use formats.

Funding better collection and sorting infrastructure

Part of the money from pEPR (£1.5 billion per annum) is meant to support local authority collection systems and recycling performance. The problem is that pEPR mainly acts after packaging exists, not as a hard brake on plastic production itself. Whilst it may improve design for recyclability, it doesn't necessarily cap virgin plastic production, ban problematic polymers outright, force reuse systems at scale or fully address over-packaging and the convenience culture.

pEPR can make bad packaging more expensive but not illegal. If pEPR works properly, it should move policy away from the old fiction that we can recycle our way out of this. It should say instead that if you place unrecyclable or hard-to-recycle packaging on the market, you will pay for the damage - a much more honest mechanism.

But pEPR only works if paired with Simpler Recycling, Digital Waste Tracking, Deposit Return Schemes, Eco-design standards and potentially material bans or production constraints. Otherwise it risks becoming a tax on bad packaging rather than a system that actually prevents bad packaging.

pEPR may make producers pay the piper — but it doesn’t necessarily stop them playing the same old tune. It's early days, but now is the time to analyse it critically; very critically. More like this (pEPR) - link - more like this (EU EPR) - link - more like this (legislation) - link

(SCD) RECYCLING IS NOT ENOUGH


Recycling has been touted as a solution to combat the global plastic pollution crisis, but recycling rates of 10% are ineffective against annual plastic production of >460 million tonnes. Solutions beyond recycling, such as capping production, improved product design, alternative materials, phasing out problematic plastics, and reduction and reuse strategies, are needed.

Current rates of plastic production and use, particularly single-use plastic products, are unsustainable. Cumulative primary plastic production has grown 20-fold in the past 50 years and surpassed 10,000 million tonnes by 2020, with more than 460 million tonnes produced in 2019 alone.

Roughly 40% of primary plastic production comprises single-use plastics, which are designed for single use, with limited recyclability. These difficult-to-recycle single-use plastics—or problematic plastics—continue to drive global production and consumption, leading to unprecedented plastic waste generation and widespread plastic pollution.

Increasing plastic pollution in the environment has become a global crisis, driving increased greenhouse gas emissions that accelerate climate change and pose serious risks to human health. This has even been recognized by the international community, although they have yet to reach an agreement on a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty to end plastic pollution.

Of all the plastic that has ever been produced, only 10% has ever been recycled and 14% has been incinerated, while the remaining 76% ends up in landfills, dumps, or the natural environment. Although recycling has been touted as a sustainable solution to curb plastic waste, it is ineffective in the face of rising global plastic production due to low rates of recycling. Roughly 10% of plastics are recycled globally. This is because most plastic products are not designed to be reused or recycled at their end of life. Even if plastic recycling rates were to increase, there are many unintended environmental impacts to consider. For example, the resulting lower-grade polymers produce low-quality, non-durable, downcycled products. These low-quality downcycled products have limited recyclability, restricted to only a few cycles.

At the end of life, these downcycled products then need to be disposed of. Recycled plastics also exhibit higher levels of hazardous chemicals such as brominated flame retardants, posing health risks for recycling workers and end users. Even the washing process during mechanical recycling also releases microplastics into the environment. Combined with all these negative environmental and health impacts, recycled plastic is often mixed with virgin feedstocks to maintain desired properties, undermining the very concept of recycling for a circular economy. More of this article (sciencedirect.com) - link - more like this (plastic recycling) - link - more like this (the future) - link

Sunday, 19 April 2026

(EUN) FINLAND OPENS NUCLEAR ONKALO


A Posiva worker stands by vehicles inside a tunnel at the Onkalo nuclear waste repository on the island of Olkiluoto, Finland, Tuesday 24 February, 2026. AP Photo

Onkalo is the world's first facility for permanently disposing radioactive spent nuclear fuel. It is expected to operate until the 2120s.

After decades of construction, the world's first facility for permanently disposing of spent nuclear fuel is set to begin operations in Finland, with authorities expected to grant a license within months.

The structure will become a final resting place for tons of dangerous radioactive waste. The building of Onkalo, which means “cave” in Finnish, began on the west coast in 2004. The €1 billion facility is expected to operate until the 2120s.

'Isolated from civilisation'

The facility is located on the island of Olkiluoto, in a dense wooded area. The closest town is Eurajoki, about 15 kilometres away, which is home to roughly 9,000 people, many of whom work at the power plant or storage facility.

The site is near three of Finland’s five nuclear reactors. It was chosen for its bedrock, known for its high stability and low risk of earthquakes. "The isolation from the civilisation and mankind on the surface is important because of the radiation caused by the waste," said Tuomas Pere, geologist at Posiva Oy, the company responsible for Finnish nuclear waste's management.

"But the thing is that by doing this final disposal, we can dispose of the waste more safely than by storing it in facilities located on the ground surface," he added.
Using unmanned machinery at a nearby encapsulation plant, radioactive rods will be sealed in copper canisters and then buried deep in tunnels over 400 metres underground, then packed in with “buffer” layers of water-absorbing bentonite clay.

Onkalo can store 6,500 tons of spent nuclear fuel, according to Posiva.

According to a 2022 report by the International Atomic Energy Agency, almost 400,000 tons of spent fuel have been produced since the 1950s, with two-thirds remaining in temporary storage and one-third being recycled in a complex process.

Currently, spent nuclear fuel is temporarily stored inside spent nuclear fuel pools at individual reactors and at dry cask storage sites above ground.

Remaining risks

But geologic disposal of nuclear waste is still fraught with “uncertainties”, warned Edwin Lyman, director of nuclear power safety at the Union of Concerned Scientists, an American nonprofit organisation.

“My view of nuclear waste disposal is that there’s no good option, but it’s important to find the least bad option,” he said.

He said that permanently storing nuclear waste underground is better than leaving it on the surface, because the material could be vulnerable to sabotage when kept above ground.
The risks associated with nuclear waste repositories will mainly affect “future generations,” Lyman added. “My view of nuclear waste disposal is that there’s no good option, but it’s important to find the least bad option,” he said.

He said that permanently storing nuclear waste underground is better than leaving it on the surface, because the material could be vulnerable to sabotage when kept above ground.
The risks associated with nuclear waste repositories will mainly affect “future generations,” Lyman added. Hence, nuclear semiotics is trying to develop warning signs about nuclear waste repositories that can be understood by humans 10,000 years from now - or much longer given that it takes hundreds of thousands of years before nuclear waste is no longer dangerous.

"We have had Chernobyl, we have had Fukushima and obviously the nuclear waste. We are perhaps somewhere close to a solution for that," Juha Aromaa, deputy programme manager at Greenpeace Finland, said, adding "nobody else in the world is anywhere near to solving this problem." In 1994, legislation was passed requiring nuclear waste generated in Finland to be handled, stored and permanently disposed of within the country’s borders. “Back then some of the waste was still exported, but we wanted to take care of it ourselves,” said Sari Multala, Finland's environment minister.

Multala did not rule out eventually accepting limited amounts of nuclear from other countries. More of this publication (Euro News) - link - more like this (nuclear waste) - link - more like this (Finland) - link

Saturday, 18 April 2026

(GUF) DESIGNING FOR THE MACHINES


There’s a moment in every new piece of legislation where ambition meets reality and for the UK’s Deposit Return Scheme, that moment is a Reverse Vending Machine, because if your packaging doesn’t fit, you have a problem.

From ‘Recyclable’ to ‘Recognisable’

For years, manufacturers have been told to design packaging to be recyclable, now, they’re being told to design it to be recognisable; a subtle shift but a significant one.

Under the latest Exchange for Change Material Specification (April 2026), a container isn’t just judged on what it’s made from, it’s judged on whether a machine can identify it, scan it, weigh it and crush it with at least 95% accuracy. Miss that mark and your perfectly 'recyclable' packaging is suddenly downgraded to a manual return process; the operational equivalent of being sent to the naughty step.

The Reverse Vending Machine is now the gatekeeper of the circular economy and to pass through it containers must be PET, aluminium or steel; sit neatly within 150 ml to 3 litres; be stable, not top heavy and compress efficiently (up to 75% for cans). In other words, forget artistic packaging; this is engineering. Square bottles, quirky shapes, thick-walled plastics; anything that slows down or jams a machine will be quietly filtered out and excluded.

From Materials to Data

If recycling once revolved around materials, it now revolves around data. Every container must carry a unique, scheme-specific barcode linked to a central 'Article List' that updates daily across the network. No barcode? No deposit. Wrong barcode? No refund. Damaged barcode? Good luck with that.

We’re moving from waste management to product verification. From bins to databases. From designers to technical compliance managers. For the first time, operational practicality is baked into the rules. Bottles should aim for less than 50% label coverage to improve recycling quality and that’s not a suggestion, it’s a quiet warning because if your label design compromises material recovery, it won’t just affect recyclability scores; it will affect cost, compliance and acceptance or put another way: packaging is no longer just being designed for recycling, it’s being designed for system obedience.

The Rise of Manual Return – The Quiet Consequence

There’s a phrase buried in the Exchange for Change document that deserves more attention. 'Containers not meeting the minimum recognition standards will need to be returned via the Manual Return Process'. That sentence is doing a lot of heavy lifting.

Manual return means:

Slower processing
• Higher handling costs
• Increased fraud risk
• Operational friction at retail


It’s not a fallback, it’s a politely worded penalty. Low-volume producers (≤6,250 units initially) pay no fees. There’s no mandatory DRS logo but they still need to register and report, meaning that even at the margins the system is watching.

The Proportionality Question

And this is where the scheme starts to feel slightly overbuilt. For all the language of circularity and reform, this is a highly controlled national infrastructure of scanners, barcodes, article lists, live database syncing, machine-recognition thresholds, fraud safeguards and manual return contingencies. All largely designed to capture drinks containers, not complex composites; not hazardous materials; not the genuinely difficult end of the waste stream.

This is all just for bottles and cans which are already being separated and collected through existing kerbside systems so the question becomes unavoidable: Is this level of engineering, control and cost proportionate to the material it is trying to recover?

At some point, the circular economy starts to resemble an expensive national sorting ritual for items that we were already collecting, or more accurately it risks feeling like a moon landing for drinks containers; an extraordinary level of engineering for a problem that was never that complex.

Standardisation Over Aspiration

Strip away the technical language and the message is clear: The circular economy is being standardised, not through aspiration; but through specification packaging that must be machine compatible; materials must be predictable; data must be traceable and anything that doesn’t fit that model becomes inefficient, expensive or obsolete. The DRS isn’t just trying to improve recycling rates, it’s trying to remove ambiguity from the system altogether.

In my opinion, the real issue isn’t whether the system can be made to work, it probably can and will; the issue is whether the cost, complexity and rigidity of making it work are justified by the material it's designed to recover because as the specification evolves, it begins to ask a different question entirely - not whether packaging is recyclable but whether it is acceptable to the machine and if it isn’t, it won’t survive the system. Exchange for Change - link - More like this (DRS) - link - more like this (DRS) - link - more like this (packaging) - link

Friday, 17 April 2026

(FUK) GOVERNMENT REJECTS FLY-TIPPING REFORMS

The government is facing mounting criticism after refusing to reform Britain’s fly-tipping laws, despite previously acknowledging the system is unjust.

Ministers rejected proposed changes on Wednesday 15 April that rural campaigners say would have corrected a long-running unfairness, leaving farmers and rural communities to continue bearing the cost of crimes committed against them.

Under current rules, fly-tipping remains one of the few offences where victims are held financially responsible. Landowners must clear waste dumped on their property and, if they fail to do so, risk prosecution for having controlled waste on their land.

Critics say this contrasts sharply with weak enforcement against offenders, with many local authorities rarely pursuing prosecutions. The result, campaigners argue, is a “ridiculous” system that punishes victims while allowing perpetrators to avoid accountability. Pressure for reform had been building in recent months. On 25 February, the House of Lords backed amendments aimed at overhauling the system — a move welcomed by rural groups across the UK. The government opposed the changes but was defeated in the vote. 

A coalition of organisations, led by the Countryside Alliance, then urged ministers to act, pointing to the government’s own Waste Crime Action Plan, published on 19 March, which acknowledged the unfairness of existing laws. The proposed amendments would have made convicted fly-tippers automatically liable for clean-up costs and any damage caused, while ensuring victims were no longer left to foot the bill.

They also sought to place a duty on local authorities to remove dumped waste and recover costs from offenders — a shift campaigners say would have strengthened enforcement while easing the burden on landowners. Despite this, ministers declined to accept the changes, prompting accusations that the government is ignoring its own findings. The issue is continuing to escalate. Fly-tipping is estimated to cost the UK economy around £1 billion each year, with incidents in England rising to 1.26 million — a 9% increase on the previous year. 

The government has previously said it is committed to tackling waste crime through measures set out in its Waste Crime Action Plan, though campaigners argue progress on the ground remains limited.

Johnnie Furse, spokesperson for the Countryside Alliance, said the decision had deepened frustration among rural communities. “Everyone agrees that the current system is a ridiculous injustice — even the government has admitted that. And so it beggars belief that now, when the opportunity was presented to the government to fix the broken system, they refused to do so.

“It seems that this government is all talk, and no action. If those in Westminster wish to prove otherwise, urgent action is direly needed.”

The decision is likely to intensify pressure on ministers, with campaigners warning the issue could become an increasingly significant concern for rural voters. More of the publication (FarmingUK) - link - more like this (farming) - link - more like this (fly-tipping) - link

Sunday, 12 April 2026

(MOT) ADVANCED RECYCLING


Moms Clean Air Force staff and organizers stand on Capitol Hill, calling for strong protections from advanced recycling. Moms Clean Air Force

Amanda Rowoldt used to carefully collect all the plastic bags that accumulated in her home and drop them off in recycling bins at her local grocery store. She felt like she was “doing the right thing for the planet and for future generations.”


It wasn’t until years later that she learned there is no safe and effective way to recycle plastics. The bags in those bins were most likely ending up in a landfill. Angry and frustrated, the mother of two made it her mission to uncover the other myths she’d been told about plastic.

Amanda’s curiosity led her to join the national nonprofit Moms Clean Air Force where she now serves as the leader of their Ohio chapter. With the plastics industry on track to triple plastics production by mid-century, Amanda says she was determined to “protect her children and other families from the ever-growing plastics crisis.”

As traditional plastic recycling methods fall short, the industry is falsely claiming they have a new way to make plastic waste disappear—advanced recycling. They are touting this “advanced recycling” as the solution to our plastics waste problem.

But “advanced recycling” is not advanced, not recycling, and not good for the planet or people’s health. It is the petrochemical industry’s attempt to greenwash plastic waste incineration. Unfortunately, burning plastics is as toxic as it sounds. The process utilizes a type of incineration called “pyrolysis” to produce extremely contaminated oil while generating massive amounts of hazardous waste and hazardous air pollutants. This pollution from incinerating plastic can increase the risk of respiratory illness, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. It is especially dangerous for children, whose bodies are more vulnerable since they are still developing.

Last year, Amanda had a taste of what it would be like to live next to one of these facilities when she made the short drive to the Freepoint pyrolysis incinerator in Hebron, Ohio. As she pulled up next to the site, she saw black plumes of smoke coming out of the smokestacks and had to leave after only a few minutes due to sudden nausea and dizziness—but not before she captured footage. Amanda was able to leave the area but instantly thought of the families who could not and sprang into action.

The next day, she shared the video with a state lawmaker, whose staff member called the Ohio EPA that afternoon. The agency, whose job it is to enforce pollution controls to protect families, sent a team to inspect the facility. They temporarily shut down operations in late February after finding it had exceeded its air pollution limits. This citation wasn’t the end: Freepoint has since received multiple notices of violation from the Ohio EPA.

As violations mount, Amanda worries for the health of the surrounding community. The facility is located next to a residential neighborhood and schools, including a Purple Star elementary school a few miles away that serves military families.

Amanda is committed to helping safeguard health by holding lawmakers and environmental protection agencies accountable for doing their jobs protecting them from advanced recycling pollution. She says: “Without strong protections in place and enforcement, infants, children, and families near these facilities are at risk of serious illness.”

Communities Say “No” to Advanced Recycling

Freepoint is one of fewer than 10 so-called advanced recycling facilities operating in the United States, but at least 40 others have been proposed or are under construction, and the plastics industry has plans to build over 100 more.

Lani Wean is on the front lines fighting one of the facilities proposed in her state of West Virginia. Clean-Seas West Virginia is being built near her home in the Kanawha Valley, a short distance away from two schools and a public library. To add insult to injury, the site is just down the road from the Chemours chemical plant in the town of Belle, which has a long history of leaks and chemical disasters. This means that the toxic air pollutants and other hazardous byproducts from Clean Seas would be coupled with the already significant pollution in the area.

Lani’s work to raise awareness of the potential pollution from the facility has centered on sharing accurate information with the community and its leaders and serving as a go-between with legal and technical experts and her neighbors. “Our families deserve transparency and the opportunity for public input when industrial polluters propose to move into our neighborhoods,” says Lani. She has taken to radio, print, and social media to spread the word about Clean-Seas’ threat. She spoke with elected officials and council members about the impacts advanced recycling pollution can have on health. And she partnered with other groups like The Black Appalachian Coalition (BLAC) to keep residents informed.

As the families in West Virginia continue to speak up against the proposed Clean Seas facility, they are inspired by the wins seen in other states. Just next door in Pennsylvania, advanced recycling companies Encina and Alterra canceled their plans to build plastics incinerators when communities came together to protest them.

The Encina plant, slated for Point Township, was Pennsylvania’s first proposed advanced recycling plant and would have been the largest in the nation. The company ultimately withdrew its plans in 2024 following vigorous community opposition, permitting deficiencies, rejection by the zoning board, and a unanimous opposition resolution from the neighboring Northumberland Borough Council. Rachel Meyer, who was part of the coalition of groups organizing against advanced recycling buildout in Pennsylvania, said, “This win for the people of Northumberland County and beyond shows that when people receive facts about advanced recycling, people see it is not a solution to the plastic crisis but rather a source of toxic air and water pollution for communities across the state.” More of this article (Mother Jones) - link - more like this (advanced recycling) - link - more like this (Ohio) - link - more like this (plastic) - link