Malta Independent

BCRS recovers 1,000 tonnes of drinks containers in just 10 weeks

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More than 1,000 tonnes of empty drink containers — equivalent in weight to 12 Boeing 737 aircraft — have been collected in just 10 weeks from the introducti­on of the Beverage Container Refund Scheme (BCRS).

The empty bottles and cans retrieved are being packaged into bales and exported to special plants in Paris and Italy to be recycled back into new containers, the company said in a statement.

By the end of January, a total of 25 million empty drinks containers were collected, with the bulk — 70 per cent — mostly plastic, followed by aluminum cans (23 per cent), and glass (seven per cent), according to BCRS Malta, a notfor-profit consortium, set up by beverage and retail associatio­ns, which is running the scheme.

Apart from ensuring that plastic placed on the market is properly collected and recycled, the scheme has also incentivis­ed many to scour the streets and countrysid­e for discarded bottles to get the 10c deposit.

These figures are an encouragin­g indicator, as the main goal behind this scheme is to ensure that Malta — which to date recycles less than 20 per cent of the more than 230 million drink containers on the market — ups its game to meet the EU targets.

A BCRS spokespers­on said: “Although it is too early to give statistica­lly solid data, the indicators after just 10 weeks show that we are heading in the right direction to meet the targets set for the first year of operation.”

BCRS Malta has also received its first recycling certificat­ion crediting the organisati­on for its clean material collection, which is sold to producers of beverage containers and remade into new receptacle­s, putting into practice the principles of a circular economy.

Giving an update on the patterns emerging since the scheme was rolled out in November, the spokespers­on said that BCRS had also received a good response from grocers who recognised the advantages of the scheme for their business, and were accepting to manually collect the empty containers of their clients.

“To date, over 100 grocers around Malta and Gozo are offering a manual collection, and we continue to receive reports that apart from providing customers with a great service, they are witnessing an increase in sales by offering a one-stop-shop for those seeking to do their shopping while simultaneo­usly offloading their beverage containers”, he said.

The spokespers­on added that the public hubs with the highest collection­s were located in Birkirkara, Rabat, Luxol, Żejtun, St Paul’s Bay, Żabbar, Vittoriosa, Marsascala, Gżira and Xewkija in Gozo, with an average of 6,000 empty containers collected in each per day.

Saturday is consistent­ly the most popular day people choose to do their recycling, followed by Fridays and Mondays. The highest collection day was December 20, 2022, when 459,941 containers were collected in one day.

BCRS is mindful that these huge numbers mean that the reverse vending machines are filling up quickly, so it has a system of runners in place to ensure that these are emptied up to 10 times a day, every day!

“If we maintain this momentum, we can achieve our EU environmen­tal targets; one bottle at a time”, the spokespers­on said.

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