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NORWICH CITY RECYCLING

NORWICH CITY RECYCLING. AGENDA 1) Introduction 2) Basic Facts 3) Where we are now 4) Issues - City Centre - Flats & Difficult Access Areas - Residents Views - Operational Issues - End Markets - Contamination 5) What Next 6) Other Materials. BASIC FACTS.

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NORWICH CITY RECYCLING

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  1. NORWICH CITYRECYCLING AGENDA 1) Introduction 2) Basic Facts 3) Where we are now 4) Issues - City Centre - Flats & Difficult Access Areas - Residents Views - Operational Issues - End Markets - Contamination 5) What Next 6) Other Materials

  2. BASIC FACTS * 58,377 homes * 122,000 residents * 161,000 people in the City each working day * 50,509 tons of waste produced (03/04) * 354Kgs of waste per person p.a. * 59Kgs of recycling per person p.a. * Waste up by 15% in 1st 6 months 2004/05

  3. BASIC FACTS * City – 31.5 people per hectare * County – 1.5 people per hectare * 68.5% Green Box Homes * 31.5% Flats & Difficult to Access Homes * BVPI 91 - % of population served by Kerbside Collection or within 1 Kilometre of a Recycling Centre: 100%

  4. BASIC FACTS DEFRA Funding for: * 5 Recycling Lorries * 60,000 Green Boxes * 15,000 Black Baskets * 50 x 1100 Litre Recycling Bins * 10,000 Composters

  5. BASIC FACTS 2005/06 Statutory Target = 18%

  6. WHERE WE ARE NOW 1) Bring Banks 2) Original Paper Collection 3) Green Boxes 4) Communal Bin Recycling

  7. WHERE WE ARE NOW BRING BANKS - 40 sites across the City - 828 tons of recycling collected 2003/04 - Commodities collected: Paper, Glass, Cans, Textiles

  8. WHERE WE ARE NOW ORIGINAL PAPER SCHEME - Now passing 3,981 homes (mostly City Centre) - 1,185 tons of paper collected (2003/04) - Now averaging 8.5 tons per week - Annual Collection Cost = £72k Less Recycling Credits & Product Income = £65k Net Collection Cost Per Tonne = £16

  9. WHERE ARE WE NOW GREEN BOX COLLECTION - 40,700 Green Boxes Distributed - Collect: Paper, Card, Glass - Average Participation Rate of 70% - 4,379 tonnes of recycling collected (2003/04) - Annual Collection Cost = £420k Less Recycling Credits & Product Income = £222k Net Collection Cost Per Tonne = £45

  10. WHERE ARE WE NOW COMMUNAL BIN RECYCLING - 112 x 1100 litre & 215 x 240 litre bins now installed - 6,697 flats & difficult access areas covered - 31 sheltered housing estates - 42 schools - 95 tons of paper & glass collected 2003/04 - Now averaging 8.5 tons per week - Annual Collection Cost = £81k Less Recycling Credits & Product Income = £22k Net Collection Cost Per Tonne = £134

  11. ISSUES A) Residents Views B) City Centre C) Flats and Difficult Access Areas D) Operational E) Markets and Usage F) Contamination

  12. ISSUES A) RESIDENTS VIEWS Mori Research Norwich Residents Survey 2001 - Important to recycle/willing to separate - Weekly collections of waste and recycling - Do not want to see a rise in council tax for recycling

  13. ISSUES A) RESIDENTS VIEWS OPERA Research Community Consultation Exercise on Waste Management - Cost and convenience - Complaints about refuse collection - Recycling funds/profits - What it means for them

  14. ISSUES A) RESIDENTS VIEWS OPERA Research Tenants and Leaseholders Research (Council owned properties) - Complaints about refuse collection - Other issues affecting quality of life - Need to agree their own solution to refuse and recycling

  15. ISSUES B) City Centre (Inner Ring Road) - Architecturally and Historically sensitive - 1,800 homes within Inner Ring Road - 161,000 Residents, Workers & Visitors Each Day - Currently on Original Paper Scheme Options - Continue with Original Paper Scheme - Green Boxes – Space and Obstruction - 1100 litre recycling bins – Space/Appearance - Plastic Sack – Litter, Obstruction - Mini Recycling Bins – in Trafalgar Sq, Piccadilly, Regent St

  16. ISSUES B) City Centre * Mini Recycling Bins – in Trafalgar Sq, Piccadilly, Regent St * Newspapers and Glass – can expand to other materials * Opportunities for Sponsorship * Guide Set Up = £102,000 (without Sponsorship) * Forecast 1,300 tonnes of Recyclables each year - from Residents, Workforce & Visitors * Annual Cost per Tonne: Collection Cost = £0 as Vehicle & Crew Already Available Less Recycling Credits & Product Sales = £62K p.a. Net Collection Cost Per Tonne = £0

  17. ISSUES B) City Centre * Location of Mini Recycling Bins Criteria: - Proximity to Housing - Space - Proximity to Other Schemes - Partners - Compatibility With Refuse storage/collection - Cost Per Tonne

  18. ISSUES C) Flats & Difficult Access Areas * Refuse & Recycling: Bespoke Solutions - Housing Type: Decks Towers Low Rise Court Yards - Assessment Criteria: Residents Views Proximity to Home Compatibility with Refuse Arrangements Residents’ Health & Safety

  19. ISSUES D) Operational * Cost of Labour * Use of Transport * Vehicles * Receptacles/Bin Type

  20. ISSUES E) MARKETS & USAGE * Long Term End User Processor Availability - Reliability - Capacity - Financial Stability - UK Market * Environmental Consequences - Transporting Materials - Reprocessing - Is it better to use virgin materials? * Transfer - Collection and Transfer Costs to End User * Commodity - Impact of collecting and handling materials

  21. ISSUES F) Contamination - Food Products - Wrong Materials - Vandalism * Contaminated load = disposal cost to Council

  22. RECYCLING PROJECTS NorWRAP - Major initiative starting Spring 2005 - Facilitating new recycling service for the City’s commercial and business communities - In partnership with Norfolk County Council - Focus City’s workforce and employers on recycling - Initially paper, card and glass

  23. WHAT NEXT Prepare Paper By January 2005 * To Report on: - Bespoke Solutions for Refuse & Recycling Collection City Centre Flats & Difficult Access Areas Green Box Expansion Plans

  24. ADDITIONAL RECYCLABLES Metal Cans - A volume commodity (3% of household waste) - Projected 250 tons at 16% recycling rate - Increases recycling rate by ½% - Increased collection costs: * Need to install compaction unit per lorry * Additional capital costs of £42k to £75k (new technology not fully marketed yet) * Additional Green Boxes/MRBs/1100s needed

  25. ADDITIONAL RECYCLABLES Textiles - Volume product (3% of household waste) - Need to keep dry during collection & storage - Textiles not processed at the MRF therefore separate dry storage & transfer facilities are required - Public interest limited - prefer using charity shops (reuse)

  26. ADDITIONAL RECYCLABLES Plastics - Volume product (< 1% in weight of household waste) - Plastic bottles only – Limited Marketplace - 1340 x 55 litre boxes to collect 1 ton - Would double recycling fleet with 4 more compaction vehicles - Guide collection costs of £500,000 Plus transport & gate fees - to be determined Plus additional Green Boxes & Communal Bins

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