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Repurpose

VDD: Reduce Your General Waste

July 3, 2020 by Rima

To return to the main schedule – click here

Church of England’s Prayer

The Journey to Zero Waste & Litter Free Environments

24th July 6-7pm: Ticketed Virtual Q&A

Shannon and Iris regularly plog the streets of Chertsey

Handling & processing waste costs money. Waste that is not recycled is incinerated, which means a resource is burned forever.

Check your knowledge of the waste terms here

Metal is the only material that can be recycled nearly an infinite amount of times. Recycling glass requires very high temperatures (over 800 degrees celcius which is higher than the temperatures of the incinerators) and materials like plastic and paper are downgraded with each “recycle”. I hear some of you saying “My council recycles plastic”, and some of you demand that “More plastic should be recycled”

When plastic is recycled, it can be recycled on average 6 times before it is deemed useless. Since September 2019, virgin plastic has been cheaper to purchase than recycled plastic.

To reduce the amount of waste that is processed, there are a number of initiatives from BYOR (Bring Your Own Reusable), Repurposing, Upcycling, and Reusing. Charity shops, preloved sites and freecycling are great ways to reuse items that are in good condition. Upcycling or repurposing using crafting methods has a finite number of times you will be able to divert your rubbish from the general waste. Our Eco-Brick project is a way to repurpose bottles and upcycle plastic rubbish we would otherwise have to put in our general waste. But we should be able to see beyond normal and see opportunities. Zero Waste / Refill shops have been popping up around the UK and globally.

Mel from Bare + Fair, a zero waste shop, will be at the discussions

BYOR is a great way to refuse purchasing single use bags, coffee cups, take away containers and more. Some of the take away shops will use your containers if you ask them. Cups in Egham used to provide a 20p discount off your purchase if you brought your own container.

Neil has been campaigning and helping lead governance changes

There are many more ways to reduce waste and we have brought together a panel that actively reduces waste from a business/organisational perspective, resident perspective, and a political perspective

  • Iris and Shannon – Chertsey residents whose challenge is to pick up litter every day in their daily walks and have an Instagram account @RubbishADay
  • Neil – from Zero Waste Europe promotes and supports societal moves to zero waste, and the need for change at political and corporate level to enable that change at a personal level.
  • Mel – runs Bare and Fair, a refill shop in Woking to enable sustainable and low-waste living a realistic option

Come join us for a free live virtual dinner discussion on going zero waste on the 24th July 6-7pm. Register for a ticket below:

If you want to leave a question for this discussion please submit a question via our question form. Click here to access

To connect with us:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/StJohnsEghamEcoChurch

@StJohnsEcoChurch https://www.facebook.com/StJohnsEcoChurch

https://www.instagram.com/stjohnsecochurch/

@StJohnsEcoChurch https://www.instagram.com/stjohnsecochurch/

Email: StJohnsEghamEcoChurch@gmail.com

To return to the main schedule – click here

Filed Under: Eco-Festival, Track 2: Zero Waste, Virtual Discussion Tagged With: Crafting, Freecycle, Litter, Recycle, Repurpose, Reuse, Rubbish, Trash, Upcycle, Waste, zero waste

Getting to Know Your Waste Terms

July 3, 2020 by Rima

To return to the main schedule – click here

What is the difference between recycling, reuse, repurpose, upcycling and more?

Zero Waste: is a philosophy with the goal to minimise waste that ends up in incinerators or landfills. It is an holistic pursuit that attempts to be systematic and scalable aiming for long term permanent solutions.

Recycling: when a material is broken down so that it can be used to make something new. “The action or process of converting waste into reusable material.” Recycling results in reduced demand for new material because the recycled material can be used instead. This is a scalable way to address waste meaning it can be done for large quantities of waste material typically by municipalities. Runnymede Borough Council collect the recyclables and Surrey County Council are responsible for where the recyclables go.

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2017-2018 Waste Generation and Recycling Statistics

Reuse / Reusable: repeatedly using an item without significant alteration of the original (eg jars can be re-used – after cleaning and removing the label but without further modifcations). This is usually an individual effort except for some deposit systems and bottle re-use programs.

Repurpose: using a material in a way not originally intended but without significant alteration. This is usually not scalable but is typically done on a project basis. Eg using an old yoghurt container as a pot for plants. There is a limit to how many yoghurt containers can be used in this way.

Upcycling: turning a discarded product into something useful / of higher quality. Crafting with waste materials can be included in this. This is rarely scalable – meaning it is usually done on a one-off basis and is not an effective solution for waste reduction because it is time consuming and there may be little demand for the end product. A lot of upcycling requires the use of new materials as part of the project (paints, glues, some new parts, etc). Craft projects are generally not effective at waste reduction though they can sometimes be used to good effect as an artistic statement about waste.

Incineration: is sometimes referred to in the media as “recycling” as in “waste is recycled into energy” “Swedes recycle nearly 100 per cent of their household waste”. This is NOT recycling – it destroys the material, it does not recover it which is an essential part of recycling.

To connect with us:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/StJohnsEghamEcoChurch

@StJohnsEcoChurch https://www.facebook.com/StJohnsEcoChurch

https://www.instagram.com/stjohnsecochurch/

@StJohnsEcoChurch https://www.instagram.com/stjohnsecochurch/

Email: StJohnsEghamEcoChurch@gmail.com

To return to the main schedule – click here

Filed Under: Eco-Festival, Track 2: Zero Waste Tagged With: incineration, recycling, Repurpose, Reuse, upcycling, waste terms, zero waste

Eco-Brick Collection

June 30, 2020 by Rima

To return to the main schedule – click here

Be Part of the Eco-Brick Making Team

Throughout 2020

St John’s would like to create more seating areas, a well being garden with raised beds and potentially a shed.

As part of our commitment to reducing general waste, we would like to create these items with eco-bricks. An Eco-brick is a bottle stuffed completely with plastic so that the bottle is turgid and cannot be deformed. This locks away the plastic until a time when our technology is good enough for it to be recovered back as a resource. Currently our waste plastic will be incinerated.

Stuff the bottom with a single colour and ensure bottle is completely packed with plastic rubbish

Some of the ideas we have seen on the web to recreate within the church grounds:

To Make an Eco-Brick

If you would like to help us, then please read this resource here: https://www.ecobricks.org/how/

Alternatively you can watch this video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MQYsXxHKgMk&feature=emb_logo

We will work with all sizes and all eco-bricks can be left for us at St John’s with the hope messages. One of our eco-team members will pick up your eco-bricks. Do notify us as well in our Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/groups/StJohnsEghamEcoChurch/ and/or via email StJohnsEghamEcoChurch@gmail.com

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To connect with us:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/StJohnsEghamEcoChurch

@StJohnsEcoChurch https://www.facebook.com/StJohnsEcoChurch

https://www.instagram.com/stjohnsecochurch/

@StJohnsEcoChurch https://www.instagram.com/stjohnsecochurch/

Email: StJohnsEghamEcoChurch@gmail.com

To return to the main schedule – click here

Filed Under: Eco-Festival, Physical Activity, Track 2: Zero Waste Tagged With: Eco-Bricks, Plastic, Repurpose, Reuse, Sustainability, Waste

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St. John’s Egham

Manor Farm Lane
Egham
Surrey
TW20 9HR

email: office@stjohnsegham.com

phone: 01784 605400

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