DSCToronto
Superstar
Member Bio
- Joined
- Jan 13, 2008
- Messages
- 22,042
- Reaction score
- 36,032
- Location
- St Lawrence Market Area
As I pointed out, if citizens do not do some sorting and only use one bin, much of what COULD be recycled or turned into compost is too contaminated and must go into landfill. Most cities are running out of convenient and safe landfill sites so it is clearly a good idea to reduce the quantity of material going into landfill. Yes, of course there could/should be less packaging and making producers responsible as the new Ontario system thinks it is doing is a good idea but to just say that sorting waste is not your or my job is really not terribly helpful.This should not be my (or your) job, nor our problem to solve. One could argue that we shouldn't be recycling anything besides things that can be infinitely recycled, like glass and metals. A lot of other things recycled may be recycled once, and then landfilled anyway. Let's remember that everything we consume came from the earth, so putting it back in the earth after its use is not a moral sin. Recycling enables over-packaging, so the real solution is to produce far less packaging by fining producers and importers per gram or unit of single-use material. The best system is upstream accountability: fine the polluter, shrink the package, or remove it entirely.




