PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Spanish cities fail to meet legal requirements on paper and container recycling

Spanish cities fail to meet legal requirements on paper and container recycling
2011-02-14
(Press-News.org) Spanish legislation stipulates that at least 60% of waste paper and cardboard collected must be recycled, along with 60% of glass, 50% of metals and 22.5% of plastics. However, a study by researchers at the Jaume I (UJI) University in Castellón shows that this minimum requirement is only exceeded in the case of glass.

"Collection from sites for depositing paper and cardboard stands at 45% in the best of cases, at a maximum distance of 80 metres, while the average percentage for containers is 20%, meaning the target is not met either for plastics or metals", Antonio Gallardo, a professor at the UJI and co-author of the study, tells SINC. "This may possibly be due to the fact that recycling has been introduced more recently for containers than for glass".

The study, published in the journal Waste Management, was based on surveys carried out in Spanish towns with more than 50,000 inhabitants. The results show that each person generates 1.43 kg of waste per day, and that the distance to the collection point determines how much they separate of each material. Towns with the highest levels of waste separation are those where people can place their waste bins outside their houses, in other words only between 25 and 30 metres away.

Four collection models

Four collection models were identified, which varied between towns and autonomous regions. The most common model involves waste being separated into four sections – paper/ cardboard, glass, containers, and other waste. The bins for the first three are located at a collection point that is generally fairly far away (between 80 and 250 metres), while the rest of the waste is collected directly from the street outside people's houses.

The model with the greatest volume of containers collected – although it also entails a greater proportion of improper (incorrect) material – is the one with two bins on the street (for waste and containers), and a further two at the collection point (paper/ cardboard and glass). The third option is similar, but sees the containers bin substituted for an organic waste bin.

According to the study, the most efficient system is where waste is separated into five classifications – with two bins on the street outside the house for organic and inorganic waste, and the other three (paper/ cardboard, glass and containers) at the collection area. This is the method used in Catalonia, where people are legally obliged to separate organic waste.

"The high level of separation of waste at source, and the separate handling of each of these sections has led to a situation where city councils are not aware of the true make-up of their waste, and this was not the case a few years ago", says Antonio Gallardo.

The researchers are currently working on another recycling study in city council areas with between 5,000 and 50,000 inhabitants, which shows that up to eight different models are in use in small towns.



INFORMATION:

References:

Antonio Gallardo, María D. Bovea, Francisco J. Colomer, Miriam Prades y Mar Carlos. "Comparison of different collection systems for sorted household waste in Spain". Waste Management 30 (12): 2430�, december 2010.

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Spanish cities fail to meet legal requirements on paper and container recycling

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Canonical Releases World's Most Comprehensive, Up-to-Date Component Catalog for Linux

2011-02-14
Canonical today announced that for the first time it was making publicly available its complete database of certified components for Ubuntu and Linux -- rapidly reducing the time-to-market for Original Design Manufacturers (ODMs) working on Ubuntu or Linux machines. The catalogue gives ODMs a selection of over 1300 certified components from 161 manufacturers, making it the largest list of Linux-compatible components available. It takes advantage of Canonical's position at the heart of the server and PC industry, which enables the company to get components first as it ...

Living in the matrix: Sugar residues regulate growth and survival of nerve cells

Living in the matrix: Sugar residues regulate growth and survival of nerve cells
2011-02-14
Brain and spinal cord comprise more than just nerve cells. The extracellular matrix, a complex scaffold of proteins with sugar residues, surrounds the cells and influences their well-being. Prof. Wiese's team is interested in the interaction of the matrix with a specific kind of nerve cells, which transmit signals from the brain to muscles (motoneurons). Because injured motoneurons lead to paralysis, clinicians have great interest in being able to influence the growth of these cells. "If we had a medication that could change the extracellular matrix so that it favours the ...

A Different Approach to Medicine Meets a Different Approach to Design Thanks to LogoBee Logo Design

2011-02-14
Where more standard medicine fails, people turn their attention to other means of healing. Those include acupuncture, naturopathy, homeopathy and many more, but none are as widely recognized as chiropractic, a discipline that primarily uses manual therapy to heal the body, and particularly the spine, ever-important pillar that supports the body and also serves as the seat of the central nervous system. Chiropractic may ignite controversy, but evidence "for" is strong enough to consider it as a solid branch of healthcare. Now, LogoBee sets out to aid chiropractors in ...

Use of alcohol-free antibacterial mouth-rinse is associated with decrease in preterm birth

2011-02-14
SAN FRANCISCO (February 11, 2011) — In a study to be presented today at the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine's (SMFM) annual meeting, The Pregnancy Meeting ™, in San Francisco, researchers will present findings that show that use of non alcohol antibacterial mouth-rinse containing cetylpyridinium chloride (CPC) decreases the incidence of preterm birth (PTB). "This research demonstrated that reducing the severity of periodontal disease has a direct correlation with preterm birth," said Marjorie Jeffcoat, D.M.D., one of the study's authors. "Preterm birth is the major ...

MWC 2011: 3-D films on your cell phone

MWC 2011: 3-D films on your cell phone
2011-02-14
This release is available in German. Halting page loading and postage stamp sized-videos jiggling all over the screen – those days are gone for good thanks to Smartphones, flat rates and fast data links. Last year, 100 million videos were seen on YouTube with cell phones all over the world. A survey of the high-tech association BITKOM found that 10 million people surf the Internet with their cell phones in Germany. And there's another hype that is unbroken: 3-D films. Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications, Heinrich-Hertz-Institut, HHI in Berlin, ...

Sam Sesi of NOW Property Preservation Stabilizing Neighborhoods Nationwide

2011-02-14
Sam Sesi, owner of NOW Property Preservation, utilizes his skills to stabilize neighborhoods nationwide. The area that Sam Sesi of NOW Property Preservation stabilizes neighborhoods in is the foreclosure home sales area nationwide. "Each property is the key to a new life and a new beginning. What family will move in next door to a home with code violations or just not maintained?", remarks Sam Sesi. By maintaining foreclosure/reo homes, Sam Sesi of NOW Property Preservation keeps neighborhoods stabilized. The services that NOW Property Preservation provides include ...

CeBIT 2011: Administration in the cloud

CeBIT 2011: Administration in the cloud
2011-02-14
This release is available in German. Cloud Computing is a tempting development for IT managers: with cloud computing, companies and organizations no longer have to acquire servers and software solutions themselves and instead rent the capacities they need for data, computing power and applications from professional providers. You only pay for what you use. In Germany, primarily companies are turning to cloud computing, transferring their data, applications and networks to server farms at Amazon, Google, IBM, Microsoft or other IT service providers. In the space of just ...

ShopforBags.com Offers Colorful Jelly Watches with Crystal Detail

2011-02-14
While many had a white Christmas, it's a new year and time to brighten things up with colorful silicon rubber watches from Shopforbags.com. From celebs and fashionistas to soccer moms and teens, jelly sports watches are poised to be a top trend for spring. Leading retailers will prepare for spring shopping fever with Shopforbag.com's trendy watches including crosses, fleur de lis, peace signs, zebra print, flowers and even collegiate logos. The wholesale watches - embellished with Austrian crystal rhinestones around the face - are available in a variety of bright and ...

You benefit if your romantic partner recovers well from spats, U of M study finds

2011-02-14
AUDIO: People searching for fulfilling and stable romantic relationships should look for a romantic partner who recovers from conflict well. Yes, it turns out that if your romantic partner recoups well... Click here for more information. People searching for fulfilling and stable romantic relationships should look for a romantic partner who recovers from conflict well. Yes, it turns out that if your romantic partner recoups well after the two of you have a spat, you reap the benefits, ...

University Hospitals system-approach to stroke care increases the use of tPA therapy by 13.5-fold

2011-02-14
University Hospitals (UH) Stroke and Cerebrovascular Center recently reported that it has increased the use of tPA or "clot busting therapy" for ischemic stroke by 13.5 times throughout UH system hospitals since implementing the System Stroke Program (SSP). Launched in 2008, SSP sought to increase access to the lifesaving treatment for acute (urgent) ischemic stroke patients in the 15 counties surrounding Cleveland. tPA is Tissue Plasminogen Activator, a drug that dissolves blood clots and must be administered intravenously within 4.5 hours of the onset of stroke symptoms ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Delta-8 THC use highest where marijuana is illegal, study finds

Study shows blood conservation technique reduces odds of transfusion by 27% during heart surgery

Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development

Complete brain activity map revealed for the first time

Children with sickle cell disease face higher risk of dental issues, yet many don’t receive needed care

First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice

Mechanical forces drive evolutionary change

Safe, practical underground carbon storage could reduce warming by only 0.7°C – almost 10 times less than previously thought

Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora

Patient reports aren’t anecdotal—they’re valuable data

Mount Sinai study discovers potential link between stress and type 2 diabetes

Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly

Precision genetic target provides hope for Barth syndrome treatment

Colorless solar windows: Transforming architecture into clean power plants

SwRI-proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close

Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation adds no risk to procedure

New research finds 62% of AFib patients were unaware of the condition before diagnosis

69 schools awarded wellness grants to support healthier communities nationwide

Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial—The TARGET statement

Nonregistration, discontinuation, and nonpublication of randomized trials

Improving the reporting on health equity in observational research (STROBE-Equity)

Bacteria that ‘shine a light’ on microplastic pollution

SeoulTech develop hybrid polymer-CNT electrodes for safer brain-machine interfaces

From symptoms to biology: Neurodegeneration in paraventricular thalamus in bipolar disorder

From longevity to cancer: Understanding the dual nature of polyamines

Faraday Institution commits a further £9M to battery research to deliver commercial impact

Study: Evaluating chatbot accuracy in the fast-changing blood cancer field

A ‘wasteful’ plant process makes a key prenatal vitamin. Climate change may reduce it.

Targeted cell removal offers treatment hope

Here we glow: New organic liquid provides efficient phosphorescence

[Press-News.org] Spanish cities fail to meet legal requirements on paper and container recycling