The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Plastics revolution ends mix-up on bin recycling

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

Fifers will soon become the first people in Scotland who can throw all their plastic waste into the recycling bin.

Workers at firm Yes Recycling and the council’s arms length waste body Cireco have developed a process for recycling flexible plastics such as bread bags and other food packaging.

The change, scheduled to come in this spring, will make recycling easier for thousands of Fifers and could boost recycling rates by cutting down on contaminat­ion in the area’s green plastics bins.

The lack of clarity around what can and cannot be recycled has confused many residents across Scotland and contribute­d to hefty fines for contaminat­ed waste.

Omer Kutluoglu is director of Buckingham­shire-based firm Yes Recycling.

His company is in the process of completing work on a new recycling centre in Whitehill Industrial Estate in Glenrothes.

The company will take Fife residents’ 3-4,000 tonnes of soft plastic waste and transform it into ecosheet. Builders use ecosheet as an alternativ­e to plywood.

Mr Kutluoglu said: “Fife Council will be the first place in the world, I think, where residents can put every bit of plastic into their bin and it will all be recycled here in Fife.

“Other councils up and down the country are not doing that.”

He said most plastic food packaging is made from special kinds of plastic that are difficult and expensive to recycle.

But that plastic, he argued, performs a vital role.

“There are lots of people who say let’s ditch plastic.

“But if we ditched plastic then there would be a huge amount of wastage. People need plastic and they need plastic to do its job.”

Cireco workers will sort the plastic waste at their state-of-the-art facility in Dunfermlin­e before moving the flexible plastics to Glenrothes for processing.

Mr Kutluoglu added: “What happens is the councils negotiate with people who just want to take the valuable stuff and burn the rest. But in Fife, it’s been brilliant. We’ve devised a long-term solution.

“From our side that’s the culminatio­n of 12 years of research and developmen­t, and tens and tens of millions of pounds spent on getting to this stage.”

Robin Baird, chief executive officer of Cireco Scotland, said “significan­t volumes” of unrecyclab­le waste end up in the kingdom’s recycling bins every year.

That is despite communicat­ion campaigns and other awareness raising initiative­s.

He said: “There are two forms of contaminat­ion. There is malicious contaminat­ion, like nappies. People know you don’t put nappies in the recycling.

“Other people think they’re doing the right thing. We want to encourage that. Projects like flexible plastics mean that people can make decisions in confidence.”

Well-meaning residents putting non-recyclable­s in the recycling bin has become so common it has even coined its own term – wishcyclin­g.

Managers at supermarke­t giant Morrisons have already invested millions in the flexible plastic recycling process. Zero Waste Scotland has also supported the technology with two large grants.

One of these has supported an “optical sorter” machine, which will be used to sift the plastic waste at Cireco’s Dunfermlin­e base.

Liberal Democrat Tay Bridgehead councillor Jonny Tepp said “contaminan­t waste” makes up about 20% of all the recycling collected.

“Because more will be collected, the unknown impact on the amount of general waste going to landfill could also be significan­t, which would generate further savings.”

 ?? ?? TURNING THE TIDE: Councillor Jonny Tepp has applauded the breakthrou­gh in the project being led by Omer Kutluoglu, inset, and Yes Recycling.
TURNING THE TIDE: Councillor Jonny Tepp has applauded the breakthrou­gh in the project being led by Omer Kutluoglu, inset, and Yes Recycling.

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