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Household Rubbish What happens to it?

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Household Rubbish. What happens to it?. Landfill Sites. Lots of air pollution / dust Rats and Gulls / Contamination/ Extra HGV traffic. Incineration plants. Burns everything including the re-usable materials Produces lots of air pollution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Household Rubbish

Household Rubbish

What happens to it?

Page 2: Household Rubbish

Landfill Sites

Lots of air pollution / dust

Rats and Gulls / Contamination/

Extra HGV traffic

Page 3: Household Rubbish

Incineration plants

• Burns everything including the re-usable materials

• Produces lots of air pollution

• Although it can be used to produce electricity- very inefficient

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What are the alternatives?

The 3 R’sReduceReuse

Recycle

What can we do to protect valuable resources?

Page 5: Household Rubbish

Recycling

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• What sort of things can be recycled?

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Cans

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BottlesPlastic and glass

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Paper and Cardboard

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Clothes / textiles and shoes

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How do we collect these goods?

Door to Door with leafletsTextile banks

Charity Shop returnsSchools Collections

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What happens to the items after collection?

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Repacked for easy stacking

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Loaded on to Trucks / Containers

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Sorted and graded into lots of different grades and types of clothing that can

be re-worn

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And items that can’t are made into wiper cloths for industry

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Good quality light/tropical clothing is sent out to the Third world

and Asian countries

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This creates jobs and ….

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enables some people to earn a living and the others are able to afford new clothing and shoes for their families without having

to rely on Charity or handouts

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It also brings in much needed money from tourists

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The heavier items e.g. woollen jumpers, blankets, coats etc are sent to the colder

Eastern Bloc countries, where again it creates employment and allows people to provide for

their own families.

It is estimated that 70% of the worlds population uses second-hand clothes.

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It is estimated that 400,000 to 700,000 tonnes of textiles, worth an estimated £400 million, are sent to landfill every

year in the UK.

At least 50 % of the textiles going for landfill are re-usable / recyclable.

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Schools programme

Sometimes site a Textile bank at the schoolProvide bags for collection

Send letter home with children

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Things not to do with the letter

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Show it to parents/guardians

Grandparents Friends / Neighbours

What to do with letter

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Then bring in the collected bags on the arranged day

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You must get permission from Your parents before bringing items in.

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Because if your Dad should look like this

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Or this..when he goes to work

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But has to go like this

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Or this

You could be grounded until you are about 35

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Remember•Reduce•Reuse

•Recycle

Page 33: Household Rubbish