To recycle, or not to recycle (and how) - an A-Z guide

Find alphabetically listed below details for common household waste on which bin it belongs in, tips for recycling, where to recycle hard to recycle items, and why you should recycle!!

Can't find the item your looking for? Check out WasteAware or RecycleNow for more materials and places to recycle.

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Contact lens products

Lenses belong in your REFUSE bin (never down the toilet).

The cardboard box, lens pot (with foil top removed and placed in your refuse bin), and empty lens solution bottles belong in your RECYCLING bin.

Please Remember: Please remove the foil lid from the lens pot before recycling. The foil lid belongs in the refuse bin.

Hints and Tips: TerraCycle collect lenses, lens pots, and foils in some areas, have a look at their website to see if you have a local recycling station.



Cotton wool, cotton pads and sanitary products

Cotton wool, cotton pads, and sanitary products belong in your REFUSE bin.

Examples: Sanitary pads, tampons, panty liners, cotton wool makeup pads, ear buds.

Please Remember: Flushing these materials causes’ huge issues in our sewerage systems, water filtration process and in our oceans, as they are all full of plastic so don’t break down. This includes ’flushable’ wipes.

Hints and Tips: Why not try reusable cloth wipes, pads, and sanitary products? Follow City to Sea and Surfers Against Sewerage to find out more about reusable products (including discount codes from City to Sea) and ocean pollution.

Facts:

  • Flushed plastics make up around 2% of beach litter in the UK. Menstrual products are the fifth most common item found on Europe’s beaches, more widespread than single-use coffee cups, cutlery or straws.
  • 8billion cotton buds are used each year in the UK, with 10% being flushed down the toilet having detrimental impacts in water ways, sewerage systems, and the ocean. Make sure you put them in your refuse bin!
  • A ‘conventional’ pack of menstrual pads contains around the same amount of plastic as 5 carrier bags. Depending on where it ends up as waste, it could have a longer life-span than the person who uses it!
  • It’s estimated that every single day in the UK about 700,000 panty liners, 2.5 million tampons and 1.4 million pads are flushed down the toilet, many blocking our sewer systems and entering rivers and oceans.


Crisp and sweet packets

Crisp and sweet packets and wrappers belong in your REFUSE bin.

Examples: Single and multipack crisp, popcorn and KP nut packets.

Please Remember: Crisp packets are a soft plastic, and some major supermarkets now have recycling points for them, so look out for carrier bag collection points and collect it at home to recycle it next time you shop. TerraCycle also collect crisp packets in some areas, have a look at their website to see if you have a local crisp packet recycling station.

Hints and Tips:

Fact: Walkers alone produces 7,000 non-recyclable crisp packets every minute.