Easy ways to be more planet-friendly with plastic.
From
toothbrushes to Tupperware; $20 notes to wheelie bins, we need plastic
in our lives like Britney needs underwear. But it's not such a flexible
friend when it comes to the environment. Here are some ways to make
your plastic encounters a bit greener.
Banish bags
Of
course, we all remember to take reusable bags to the supermarket, every
shopping trip. Ahem. But plastic bags are everywhere (4.77
billion used a year at the last count).
Do: take them to
special recycling bins in supermarkets - they'll be collected and made
into useful things like fence posts.
Don't: put them in your kerbside
recycling. They're the number one enemy of the recycling plant, says
Stuart Fyfe of Planet Ark. "People don't realise that if they
put recyclables in plastic bags it'll take manual labour to remove them
again. It really slows down the process."
Go topless
And while we're recycling… taking a moment to empty
bottles and remove tops will earn you cosmic brownie points. Plastic
bottle tops are mostly made from a different, unrecyclable type of
plastic to the bottle itself. "Very few councils can process these, so
always remove them," says Fyfe. Same goes for glass bottle tops and jar
lids.
Shop smartPlastics
are an oil-derived product - just the thought of which is enough to get
Al Gore reaching for his PowerPoint presentation.
The best way
to set his mind at ease? Buy as little of the stuff as you can. Easier
said than done, but some smart swaps include: matches instead of
disposable lighters, soap instead of bottles of shower gel or handwash,
food with minimal packaging, wooden toys instead of plastic ones (IKEA
do a great range).
Crack codes
A dizzying variety of recycling symbols and logos
appear on plastic products. A main source of confusion is the Plastics
Identification Code - the "chasing arrows" triangular logo with a
number or code inside.
Manufacturers stamp this on a product
to identify the type of plastic, not to indicate a product can be
recycled. No wonder nearly 50 per cent of Australians report being
confused about what's recyclable. Check what your council can accept at
recyclingnearyou.com.au or call the National Recyling Hotline on 1300 733 712.
Cistern act
Keep one plastic bottle (and top) out of the
recycling bin and you can save thousands of litres of water a year. If
you don't have a dual-flush toilet, a super-easy way to reduce water
usage is to fill a 750ml or 1.25 litre plastic bottle with water and
put it in your toilet cistern. Each time you flush you'll save that
amount of water. (Putting a brick in there has a similar water-saving
effect, but can damage your toilet's inner workings. And who wants to
go there?).

Got
some green living advice that's good for the environment (and your
conscience)? Time to spread the eco-love in a comment below.