Council extends recycling capacity

Councillor Linda Cooper with the new

Coffee pods and light globes, toothbrushes and beauty products, household electrical cables and x-rays – they are among a host of new items Cairns Regional Council will recycle as part of a trial launched today (Friday 6 December).

A free drop-off “Recycle Centre” unit has been established in the Council foyer at Spence Street, enabling residents to bring in items that are hard to recycle and not accepted in the fortnightly yellow lid bin collection, which are then sent to specialist recyclers.

The initiative is in response from Stratford resident Angela Hoyle who viewed a similar recycling point at the City of Hobart Council and wrote to Councillor Linda Cooper about the possibility of establishing one in Cairns.

“Anything to make the world a greener place gets a tick from me,” Cr Cooper said.

“I love it when residents contact me with great ideas they’ve seen elsewhere and they come to fruition.

“I am confident that community will embrace this trial, which will also help Council identify the demand for the recycling of specific items.”

The Recycle Centre has been made of recycled plastic and the size and shape of the individual slots can be easily modified in response to demand.

“As the waste stream changes we have to be agile and adaptive; what we recycle now will be different to what we recycle in the future,” Cr Cooper said.

“More and more items can be recycled today, so we have to adapt and cater to the demands of the public.

“For example, coffee pod machines were a niche market a decade ago, but today they are in most households and offices, so there has been a growing need to find an environmentally friendly solution to disposing of the pods.”

Council’s Waste Manager, Steve Cosatto, said key to the success of the Recycling Centre unit was ensuring that there was no “contamination” from other goods, which was why sorting and the relative cleanliness of items was important.

“For example, coffee pods need to be put into a plastic bag before they are placed in the recycling centre, and care needs to be taken not to smash light globes,” he said.

Items which can be dropped off at the Recycle Centre include:

  • Coffee pods
  • Light globes
  • Toner cartridges
  • Toothbrushes and paste tubes
  • Beauty products
  • Small e-waste and mobile phones
  • DVDs, CDs and cassette tapes
  • Household cables
  • Binders and stationary
  • Batteries
  • X-rays

/Public Release. View in full here.