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You are here:- Environment and planning > Rubbish and recycling > A to Z of recycling

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Mail :
Environmental Services
Plymouth City Council
Plymouth PL1 2AA
Phone :
01752 668000
Email :
recycling@plymouth.gov.uk
Fax :
01752 304786

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A To Z

A to Z of recycling

| A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z |

This page relates to household waste only and not waste from businesses.

A

Acetate

Acrylic

Aerosols

Aluminium

Aluminium can be recycled over and over again, saving natural resources and energy. Aluminium recycling requires only 5% of the energy and produces only 5% of the carbon dioxide emissions.

Aluminium cans

Everyday 80 million food and drinks cans end up in landfill. One recycled aluminium can saves enough energy to run a television for three hours and reduces the waste going to landfill.

Aluminium foil

Antifreeze

Antifreeze is classed as hazardous waste and is not suitable for recycling and needs to be disposed of separately from general waste items. our household waste recycling centres accept antifreeze in small quantities. Please hand containers to members of site staff on your arrival to ensure that they can be stored safely before disposal.

Asbestos

The Environment Agency classifies all asbestos containing materials as special waste. However, you are permitted to take small amounts of asbestos waste (from your own house) to Chelson Meadow, one of our household waste recycling centres, for safe disposal.

Please contact Chelson Meadow on 01752 408408 before taking asbestos waste to the recycling centre. Due to the risks of handling asbestos in its various forms it is strongly recommended that professional advice is sought and a licensed dismantler/disposer is used to deal with these potentially harmful wastes. This can be found in the Yellow Pages.

If you are disposing of bonded asbestos from your home, you should bear in mind the following points:

Ash - wood

Ash – coal or clinker

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B

Baby goods

Bathroom fittings and furniture

Barrels (beer, wine etc)

Batteries - car

Car batteries are classed as hazardous waste but are routinely recycled in the UK. If a car battery is disposed of at a landfill site or not disposed of responsibly, it may leak and could cause a great deal of damage to the environment.

Batteries - household

The UK generates 20,000 to 30,000 tonnes of batteries every year but less than 1,000 tonnes are recycled.

Batteries - rechargeable

Bedding

Beds

See furniture

Beverage cartons

See cartons

Blankets

Blockboard

You should not burn composite woods like blockboard because of the resins and glues, which are toxic.

Body Shop containers

Books

Bottles - glass

See glass bottles and jars

Bottles - plastic

Bottle tops

Boxes

Bric-a-brac

Please let us know if you find any others!

Bricks

Brushes

Bubble wrap

Building materials/rubble

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C

Cans

Cardboard

Cards

Carpets

Carpets should not be put into your green recycling bin. They can get caught up in the machinery which sorts the recycling at our materials recycling facility and may damage the equipment.

Carrier bags

Cartons

Cartridges - ink-jet, toner and laser

CD

See compact discs

Christmas cards

Christmas trees

Clothes

See also textiles

It takes 10 times more energy to make a tonne of textiles than it does a tonne of glass.

Clothing should not be put into your green recycling bin, it can get caught up and damaged in the machinery which sorts the recycling at our materials recycling facility.

Compact discs and DVDs

Computers

See also IT equipment

Cookers

Cooking oil

Reprocessed cooking oil can be used as biodiesel, which may contribute to reducing the damaging effects of transport on the environment.

No cooking oil or any other liquid should be put into your green recycling bin, which is for dry materials only. Cooking oil contaminates the other materials can lead to the rejection of a whole lorry load of recycling.

Corrugated card

See cardboard

Crockery

Crutches

Cups

See crockery

Curtains

Cutlery

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D

Detergents

DIY materials

See building materials

Duvets

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E

Egg boxes

Electrical goods

Electrical equipment should not be put into your green recycling bin, it can damage the machinery at our materials recycling facility.

Engine oil

Oil is the most commonly reported cause of waste pollution, with over 5,000 incidents recorded annually in the U.K. Even a small quantity can cause a lot of damage to the environment and threaten human health. Please dispose of oil responsibly and do not pour it down the drain.

Envelopes  - including those with plastic windows

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F

Fabric

Feathers

Files

Film (camera) pots

Fireworks

Unused fireworks are not suitable for recycling and should be treated as hazardous waste. Please take unused fireworks to our household waste recycling centres for disposal. Spent firework cases can be placed in the brown rubbish bin for disposal.

Fluorescent tubes and low energy lamps

Foam

Foil (not crisp packets)

Folders

Food

Food containers

Fridges and freezers

Fruit

See food

Furniture

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G

Garden waste

Gas bottles

LPG (liquid petroleum gas) bottles are classed as hazardous waste. In most cases, empty gas bottles are likely to be owned by the manufacturer or supplier of the product that they contain and they are regarded as being hired by the user.

Gas cookers

Glass bottles and jars

Glass should not be put into your green recycling bin. The glass breaks in the back of the refuse lorry and contaminates the other materials. Paper reprocessors will reject a load of paper if it contains glass shards and broken glass presents a health and safety risk to our staff when they are sorting the material for recycling. Broken glass can lead to the rejection of a whole lorry load of recycling.

Glass sheets

Greetings cards

See cards

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H

Hats

Hazardous waste

Hazardous waste includes:

Small quantities of household hazardous waste can be taken to either of our household waste recycling centres. Please leave household and garden chemicals in their original containers and hand items to members of site staff on your arrival to ensure that they can be stored safely before disposal.

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I

Ice cream containers

Ink jet cartridges

See cartridges

IT equipment

See also computers

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J

Jars

See glass bottles and jars

Jam jar lids

Jiffy bags

Jigsaw puzzles

Junk mail

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K

Kitchen scraps

Knitwear

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L

Leather

Leaves

Do not burn leaves, as they produce highly carcinogenic smoke.

Lids

Low Energy Lamps and Fluorescent tubes

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M

Magazines

Material

See clothes or textiles

Medicines

Return to local chemist - don't use toilet or bin, as this is hazardous

Metal

See scrap metal

Mirrors

Mobile phones

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N

Nappies

Disposable nappies can't be recycled, so try cotton washable nappies instead. This stops disposable nappies being in our environment where they can take hundreds of years to rot down in landfill sites.

Neoprene

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O

Oil

See cooking oil or engine oil

Oil filters

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P

Paint

All paints have the potential to create mess or nuisance and are considered to be hazardous waste.

Paper (white, coloured, newspapers, envelopes)

Perspex®

See acrylic

Phones

Plant pots

Plasterboard

Plasterboard is made up of 95 per cent gypsum and 5 per cent paper and can be 100 per cent recycled. It is not classed as household waste but we will accept small quantities from DIY enthusiasts at Chelson Meadow, one of our household waste recycling centres. It is no longer legal to dispose of plasterboard in landfill as it can react with biodegradable materials to produce toxic substances which have a negative impact on the environment. If you are taking plasterboard from your home to Chelson Meadow please bear in mind the following points:

Photocopiers

Pillows

Plastic (for plastic bottles see below)

In 2006, Britain's Environment Minister recommended that over packaged products should be unwrapped in supermarkets and the packaging left at the checkout. This practice has been common in Germany for some time.

Plastic bottles

Plastic wrappers (from magazines, etc)

Polystyrene

There are no local recycling schemes for polystyrene at present

Printer cartridges

See cartridges

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R

Rags

Radiators

See scrap metal

Ribbon

Rope

Rubber

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S

Sail cloth

Saucepans

Scrap metal

Shoes

Shredded paper

Not suitable for recycling as the fibres are too short to be reprocessed into new paper. You could re-use shredded paper for small animal bedding*, packing material, or put in your home compost bin. Shredded paper can go in your brown rubbish bin.

*If you do choose to use shredded paper for animal bedding, please consider the welfare of your pet as there could be sharp edges on the paper.

Sheets

See bedding and blankets

Storage containers

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T

Tea bags

Telephone directories (including Yellow Pages)

Televisions

Textiles

Textiles should not be put into your green recycling bin, they can get caught up in the machinery which sorts the recycling at our materials recycling facility and may damage the equipment.

Tiles

Timber

See wood

Tools

Toys

Tubes

Tyres

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U

UPVC

Stuart Oades is hoping to have established a destination for UPVC window frames within a couple of weeks. Need to call to confirm details and whether this will operate at one or both HWRCs.

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V

Vegetables

Video (VHS) tapes

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W

Walking sticks

Wallpaper

Washing machines

Wood

Hardboard, sleepers, and impregnated treated timber such as decking, fence posts and fence panels are not suitable for recycling.

Wood should not be put into your green recycling bin. It can get caught up in the machinery which sorts the recycling at our materials recycling facility and may damage the equipment.

Wool

Wormeries

A wormery is a container that you can keep inside or outside. It contains special worms that eat your left over food waste. The worms produce a rich compost and liquid fertiliser

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Y

Yoghurt pots

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Z

Zimmer frames

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