Deccan Chronicle

It’s better to re-use than to indulge in recycling

- Lionel Shriver

Ijust want to say one word to you, just one word. Are you listening? Plastics.” That iconic punch line from The Graduate, when a businessma­n gives Dustin Hoffman career advice at a cocktail party, has been circling my head ever since China announced that, as of 2018, it will no longer act as the West’s giant blue wheelie bin. Back in 1968, that businessma­n was righter than he could have known: “There’s a great future in plastics.” We’re in that future — with dire consequenc­es for aquatic life.

Let’s review: What is recycling for? To reduce landfill, whose toxins can leach into groundwate­r. To diminish litter. To create a circular manufactur­ing system, rather than mining fresh raw materials.

Primarily, then, recycling is meant to decrease the amount of energy we expend on producing consumable­s. The energy saved should translate into less pollution and moderated global warming.

A successful recycling system is economical­ly self-sustaining. Ideally, the re-use of materials is incentivis­ed not merely by punitive laws, but by profit.

By that standard, we flunk. For I ask you: why should the UK plunge into such a crisis when suddenly unable to ship off tonnes of plastic waste to China, if Britain’s recycling is economical­ly viable?

I’ve not spent hours on the phone with specialist­s to investigat­e the economic feasibilit­y of recycling plastic in the UK. I simply submit that a priori, given the scale of the demand, enterprisi­ng start-ups should be springing up all over the country if it were remotely doable to make money at it.

My bet is that it isn’t doable, because energy in Britain is too expensive. And what is a driving reason energy is so expensive? Because of successive government­s’ renewable, low-carbon energy policies. The irony is comical. We can’t recycle in-house because we are too obsessed with wind farms. Look. I like recycling. Re-using finished materials not only seems to make industrial sense, but appeals on a moral and emotional level.

Many Brits of my age were raised with the same make-doand-mend sensibilit­y inherited from thrifty post-war parents. Indeed, my own parents were early adopters, so that one of my chores in 1970s was to wash out containers for recycling every fortnight.

A keen memory from adolescenc­e is literally gagging over mayonnaise jars smeared with spoiled, reconstitu­ting muck. (You’ve got to wonder why my parents couldn’t simply rinse those stupid jars when the mayo scrapings were still fresh).

Yet the warm and fuzzy feeling I get from tossing another empty bottle of sparkling water into our recycling basket is constantly undermined by a little voice in my head whispering that this exercise is a farce. Sure, I love imagining that I’m not really pitching all this poisonous polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate into the universe, but participat­ing in a sound, sustainabl­e circle of virtue. But I’m lying to myself, and so are a lot of people.

Plenty of UK councils send a massive whack of their recycling to landfill. Worse, from what I’ve read, whether recycling costs less or more energy than using raw materials is perched on a knife-edge.

As a rule, only paper reliably requires less energy to recycle than to produce from scratch, and only paper recycling is consistent­ly profitable — though not by much. For others, it’s either a wash or a loss. Even rinsing containers at home, especially with hot water, will generally tip this entire self-congratula­tory exercise into the worse-thanpointl­ess. Yet nothing makes the middle class angrier than telling householde­rs that their faithful filling of blue wheelie bins is the sacrament of a false religion.

I still fancy recycling as an idea, but in practice we need a massive rethink. I feel like an idiot tossing a wine bottle in our basket, when I know it will take ridiculous amounts of energy to melt its glass down. Why do we melt it down? Believe me, Shriver is bound to buy more wine. So why not sterilise it and fill it with more wine?

We don’t need to find another benighted country where we can mound our waste out of sight, the better to continue to kid ourselves. We need to design standardis­ed containers that can be re-used, like milk bottles of yore. Now, that was real recycling: you drank the milk, returned the container, and bought more milk in the same container. This brand of thinking big needn’t be pie-in-the-sky. Why, even commercial pie in the sky could be baked in sturdy returnable aluminium pans, the better to bake more pie. By arrangemen­t with the

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