Take toothpaste, for example. The cardboard box can be recycled, but the empty toothpaste tube and lid belong in your rubbish bin! Likewise, you can pop empty food tins loose in your mixed recycling bin - but items such as food pouches for babies and pets cannot be recycled at home.
Be a checker, not a guesser
When the wrong things go in the recycling bin, it’s known as ‘wish-cycling’. It’s expensive for local councils to sort out and is very damaging for the environment.
That’s why this month we’re encouraging you to try out the Surrey Recycles search tool on the JWS website which can also be downloaded as a free app. Just search ‘Surrey Recycles’ in your App Store or on Google Play.
You can use the tool to check an item against your postcode and find out instantly if it can be composted, recycled or thrown away. Even if an item can’t be recycled from your home, you might be able to take it to a local recycling bank, reuse shop or supermarket.
You can also play our interactive waste sorting game to test your recycling knowledge.
Quick wins for your bins
Here are some other useful pointers for dealing with your recycling:
- remove non-recyclable items - some things are recycled separately such as food, clothes and home textiles, garden waste, small electricals
- recycle items loose – no recycling to be contained inside plastic bags, sacks or bin liners
- always rinse food packaging as it can’t be recycled with food on
- never throw food or drink in your mixed recycling, the moisture will ruin items in the bin and could prevent it from being recycled - food waste can be recycled separately in your caddy, collected weekly
- waste less, reuse more
- why not reduce your impact on the environment and make small swaps to reusable water bottles, food wraps, make-up remover pads and bamboo toothbrushes? In the long run, you’ll spend less, meaning you save money while helping the planet too
To find out more see Joint Waste Solutions.