The Recycling Bible
Sewing machines.
How do we recycle them? Cheap imports from China and Bangladesh
have made these machines dinosaurs.
Photo: Nonqaba waka Msimang.
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The will is there but there doesn’t seem to be an effective way of sticking to a recycling regime, probably because it is not done at source, where we do the shopping.
Practically everything we buy is packaged or carried in
plastic bags, making it difficult to decide what should be recycled what should
be regarded as total waste. I saw toilet
roll holders in a plastic bag the last time I dropped items in the blue bin, which
means the concerned citizen keeps them when the bathroom tissue is finished, to
recycle later.
We never do what can be called ‘green shopping.’ If we did, we would come home with only bunches
of carrots and organic tomatoes, because supermarkets or grocery stores provide
plastic bags for tomatoes, chillies, sweet potatoes, broccoli or whatever
vegetables we need to prepare dinner.
I should refuse them because the code for the cauliflower price is
in the orange sticker but I never do. The
plastic makes it easier to pack vegetables in the grocery bag I pull around. How about bulk shopping? Six packs of bagels
and croissants come in plastic trays, so does bulk chicken, meat or seafood.
Grocery shopping is to replenish food items kept in the
pantry, freezer and refrigerator. We also
buy things to keep the body and hair healthy.
Shopping to protect rivers, oceans and the land has never been a
priority. It is even debatable if
advocates of the green movement practise what they preach and buy soap wrapped
in paper and not shampoo and conditioner plastic bottles with pumps.
Recycling education is everywhere so we cannot feign
ignorance. The city’s blue recycling bins are in every corner. The municipality also keeps recycling alive
with interesting bus shelter and online advertising.
What is missing is goodwill and focus. Come to think of it, we don’t need a
bible. Just a little commitment from
everybody will make a sea of difference. Some footwear and clothing stores are
doing their recycling bit with nice bags that can be re-used as storage or
grocery bags.
By: Nonqaba waka Msimang.
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