Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Julia Hailes responds on recycling

After a lively debate, to say the least, one of the participants shares her experience in the Daily Telegraph blogs:

Battle for recycling

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Battle of Ideas blog in The Times

Recycling is a waste of time

Monday, October 08, 2007

Recycling is a waste of time

How many kinds of waste do you recycle? I have four containers to recycle my waste, helpfully provided by my local council. There's a box for the glass and cans; a bag for paper and card; a brown wheelie bin for the garden waste; and a green wheelie bin for the rest. There's one other thing the council helpfully provides - the threat of a hefty fine if I don't do my civic duty and separate my waste.

If this colour-coded ritual was going to save the planet, I might have some sympathy. But separating our waste for recycling makes little difference to anything except increasing our council tax bills. Few precious resources are saved by this process. According to the government's latest waste strategy, paper, cardboard, discarded food, garden waste and 'sweepings' make up roughly two-thirds of what we throw away in our homes. These things – often literally – 'grow on trees'. They certainly have little value.

Recycling might reduce carbon emissions - but not by much. We might send less waste to landfills, but in Britain there are plenty of big holes in the ground waiting to be filled in. Recycling isn't going to save the planet, but it is a constant reminder to us all of how are wasteful ways are supposedly screwing up the world.

The debate about our waste turns our old ideas about the right direction for society upside down. Traditionally, we've measured material progress by finding more efficient ways to produce the goods and services we need. It's no accident that 'time is money'. The '3Rs' - reduce, reuse, recycle - suggest we should be more concerned about saving resources than saving time. And if that means doing things in a manner which is less productive - and ultimately may mean we are poorer as a result - the moral imperative of 'saving the planet' says we should do just that.

In other words, for all the fluffy talk about a caring, sharing green future, environmentalists are ultimately more concerned about 'stuff' than people.

One day, recycling may be an efficient process with highly mechanised systems sorting and processing waste by the tonne. There could be major advantages in dealing with our waste like that. Recycling might then be the best thing to do with rubbish. But for now, recycling is a waste of time - for householders, refuse collectors and waste processors. I believe the obsession with recycling is a backward step for society, inviting us to learn the lesson that human beings are parasites on the planet.

If you really want to see recycling in action, just look at the pitiful scenes of children picking over waste dumps in the developing world, looking for something with a modicum of value to sell on. Or look at shanty town dwellers forced to cobble together a home from the things that others throw away. Why on earth are governments and campaigners imposing that kind of thinking on modern, developed societies?

I'll be debating these points at the Battle of Ideas festival, 27/28 October in London.

Recycling is a waste of time