National Recycling Week 2022

Parkes Shire

Parkes Shire Council is inviting you to celebrate National Recycling Week from Monday 7 until Sunday 13 November 2022.

National Recycling Week, established by Planet Ark in 1996, is held every year during the second week of November and this year, National Recycling Week explores the idea that Waste isn’t Waste until it’s Wasted.

Placing materials that are recyclable or recoverable in the red lid general waste bin is a waste of resources. Rethinking and recovering our waste not only keeps valuable materials out of landfill it also benefits the environment by reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

During National Recycling Week, the community is encouraged to think about waste as a resource; reconsider how we use buy, use and dispose of materials to keep them in circulation for as long as possible; and think about ways we can avoid, reduce, reuse and recycle for a better future.

Councillor Marg Applebee said, “There are so many ways we as a community can rethink our resource use. The Australasian Recycling Label is found on packaging and helps to take the confusion out of recycling. It is a simple tool to help you identify which bits go in which bin and is one of the easiest ways to double check that you are recycling right.

“It is also important that materials that can be recycled are empty and clean. Give glass bottles and jars, milk and juice cartons, steel and aluminium cans and rigid plastic bottles and containers a quick rinse to get rid of food scraps and liquid residues before they go into the yellow lid recycling bin.

“Recyclable materials must also be placed loose in the recycling bin and not in plastic bags. Plastic bags cannot be recycled and do not belong in the yellow lid bin,” added Cr Applebee.

There are also drop off opportunities for materials that can be recovered for reprocessing and specialised recycling but are not accepted in kerbside recycling bins.

Coles and Woolworths have specially marked REDcycle bins for the collection of soft plastics, while local Community Recycling Centres (CRCs), such as the Parkes CRC, accept problem and hazardous waste materials free of charge.

Hazardous materials should never be placed in any of the kerbside bins as they pose a health and safety threat to the community and to waste workers.

Brendan Hayes, Council’s Director Planning & Communities said, “We also want to remind people of the value of diverting organic materials away from landfill.

“As food and other organic materials such as garden waste break down in landfill, they release methane gas, a greenhouse gas 24 times more noxious than carbon dioxide. Using your green lid food and garden waste bin or a backyard composting system for all your household’s organic materials not only keeps this material out of landfill but also creates a valuable end product – compost,” said Mr Hayes.

/Public Release. View in full here.