Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Yellow bins, green bins and more.

Rubbish collection in Spain is pretty standardised. There are big rubbish bins, of various types, scattered at strategic points in cities, towns, villages and the countryside. The bins are emptied to some organised schedule - usually every night in the cities and towns - less frequently in country areas. Householders take their rubbish to the bin. Pinoso town is a little unusual in that it has a door to door collection most nights. There are big recycling bins all over the place too - the ones in the photo are our nearest in Culebrón village centre - and there are Ecoparques where you can take those hard to get rid of things like engine oil. For bigger things, old sofas and the like, you phone either the town hall, or the company that collects the rubbish on behalf of the municipality, and they, usually, cart it away for free.

I'd half wondered about the subject of this blog, with it's not very Spanish content, when I changed the printer ink the other day. I took the old cartridges with me to town for recycling at the mobile ecoparque which parks up by the Spar shop, in the middle of town, most Wednesdays. There was a class of school children there squabbling over free, "ecologically friendly" bags that were being handed out as recompense for listening to some sort of recycling presentation. Consumption as a way of reducing consumption always strikes me as being like going to the January Sales to save money by buying something you'd not thought of buying till it was cheaper. Hey ho, maybe I'm just a bit curmudgeonly.

Then I got another prod. I was listening to the radio. The piece was on the exhibition about Neanderthals, called Ancestors, at the Archaeological Museum in Murcia, an exhibition we made the mistake of not going to when we were there the other day. Apparently Homo sapiens lived alongside an estimated eight now-extinct humanoid type species.

So now I'm wondering if I can blog something that links humanoid extinctions to recycling.  Does it surprise you that sometimes people don't follow my conversational twists and turns - especially when I try it in Spanish?!

So we have three capazos just outside our house.  Capazos, are those big, bendy, rubber buckets. We use them as the staging post for things on their way to the recycling bins. Of the three one is for cartons, tins, wrappings and aerosols; that's to go to the yellow bin. The glass goes in the green bins and paper and card goes into the blue bin. We don't have the brown, organic waste, bins in Pinoso area.

Household recycling isn't big in Spain. I think that about one third of urban waste is recycled which is very low by European standards. We try to be good and recycle as we're asked but, to be honest, I think it's all a bit of a con. Don't get me wrong. I'm all for sensible recycling, and re-using, but I do think that if the manufacturers were less interested in reducing transport costs or how their products will display at the point of sale then a good percentage of the recycling would be completely unnecessary. When this comes up in conversation people usually remember taking pop bottles back for the deposit or the doorstep milk deliveries. I don't actually know how these things pan out if you take everything into account. Is it really better, when you consider manufacturing, transport, energy, materials and everything else, to deliver milk door to door or for us to go and get it from a shop in a vaguely recyclable container? It's not the sort of information that I have to hand. I'm sure you've had a similar conversation in the bar about whether electric cars and their toxic batteries are a good idea.

The reason I think recycling (and electric cars and lots more) may well be a smokescreen is that we live in a world where the overriding concern is making money. Nearly everything that goes on in the world is about rich people getting richer. I mean how did someone persuade us that all of these tiny efforts are about "Saving the Planet?". I'm pretty sure that, in the end, the planet will be fine. I don't think we - humankind that is -  will. In fact I'm sure our selfishness and greed will continue to cause the death of lots and lots of species and make even more of a mess of the planet. In relation to the life of the planet though our effect will be very short term. When we've taken out billions more animals and birds and insects in every conceivable way, from destroying the places they live and the food they eat through to strangling them with the plastic rings from six packs, then we'll do something similar to ourselves.  It may be that we will finally unleash our nuclear arsenal or we may just die coughing in a toxic atmosphere or buried under mounds of plastic. Nonetheless, do as we will, the planet will shrug us off and go on for quite a while yet. It will be different world, just as the world that the trilobites or ammonites or even the first jellyfish and sharks knew was a bit different. No dinosaur ever saw a car, a rubbish dump or an energy saving light bulb. The graptolites didn't need an environmental strategy and they never got together, in an as yet unbuilt and unnamed Paris or Kyoto, to lie to each other about what they weren't going to do. That's because graptolites didn't really do a lot of damage. People do a lot of damage but, until there is some sort of astronomical event that does for the Earth, swallowed by the ever expanding local star or something, the world will keep on turning and some sort of lifeforms will wander the land and oceans. 

So, back from the gigantic to the insignificant. Pinoso Town Hall, like so many others has started a composting scheme. The principal reason the Town Hall got in on the scheme is because it will help reduce their bill with the waste processing plant in Villena. It's easy enough to give the scheme a bit of an environmental spin though and, being quite gullible, I was quick to get involved. In return for going to a two hour talk they gave me a composting kit which had lots of gadgets but where the key parts were a bin for the kitchen, to throw the kitchen waste in, and a big composting bin for the garden. The melon rind and tea bags and all the gubbins from the kitchen get mixed in with the garden cuttings in the composter. The stuff doesn't have to be transported anywhere and Maggie already has plans for the compost to be used on a vegetable patch.

It's too late for the Golden Toad or the Passenger Pigeon and it's a bit unlikely that the composter will save the Javan Rhinoceros or the Red Tuna but I suppose it's not doing any harm either.


2 comments:

  1. Hello, valid points Chris.
    Are the bins still available do you know?
    I have noticed a big increase in the litter on the side of roads which when I return in the summer I plan to pick up on my walks, maybe encourage others to do the same!

    ReplyDelete
  2. yes if you follow the link on composting scheme you'll get to the Crea compost site and there are a couple of phone numbers there. Maria Obiol on 623 12 14 50 speaks English of a fashion.

    ReplyDelete