• qyron
        link
        fedilink
        English
        86 days ago

        Incorrect.

        Brazil developed a tecnique, using shredding and heat, to delaminate the aluminium from the paper.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          176 days ago

          They are technically recyclable, but in reality, most of them go straight to landfill where they dont break down.

          In Aus, we have the capability to recycle them, but even the ones that are “recycled” end up stored in warehouses until they catch fire, or shipped to China and incinerated there.

          Actual recycling is so limited in capacity that production of the waste way outstrips the recycling.

          :(

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            35 days ago

            The problem is that it is much cheaper to buy new raw materials, than to recycle household waste.

          • qyron
            link
            fedilink
            English
            06 days ago

            Tetrapak packages are highly sought after in my country because they are close to guaranteed money for recyclers. The one metric ton bail was worth close to 2000€ in 2016; can’t imagine the price today. There companies with specialized hovens that use the paper to fuse out the aluminum.

              • trollercoaster
                link
                fedilink
                English
                15 days ago

                “Recycling” is largely a euphemism for “we burn that shit, or dump it in a landfill, potentially in some far away country, so you don’t see and smell it”. That’s why “recyclers” love waste that combusts well and has a high energy content. Separation of plastic, paper, and aluminium occurs at the combustion stage, it’s a very simple and straightforward process you can even accomplish with the simplest of equipment at home. You light it on fire and the plastic and paper burn, while the aluminium melts.

            • trollercoaster
              link
              fedilink
              English
              2
              edit-2
              5 days ago

              Why exactly are they guaranteed money? I’m willing to take bets that it’s due to their high energy content when burned. Same applies to plastic waste, by the way. That stuff is loved by incinerator operators, because it burns so well it can be used to add energy to burn waste that otherwise wouldn’t burn well at all.

              • federal reverseM
                link
                fedilink
                English
                24 days ago

                Might also be a drinks-carton-specific government scheme. You never know though when people just write “my country.”

  • @kalpol
    link
    English
    36 days ago

    Protects what’s good