A novel approach to blister pack recycling
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Our next collection days

SALISBURY market place SP1 1TH ____________10-1 Monday 10 March, then Maprilay
FORDINGBRIDGE Avonway Annex SP6 1JF_____10-12 Saturday March 15, then
160 FLEET ST, LONDON, EC4A 2DQ___________10-1 Thursday March 20, then May
WILTON market place________________________10-1 Thursday 3 April t.b.c.
NUNTON/ODSTOCK
, Odstock Church carparkSP5 4JA__11-12 Tuesday 15 April, then June

The problem .....and our solution.

Many medicines are supplied in blister packs formed of aluminium welded to plastic. Each pill is protected in its individual compartment. When the pills have been used, the container is then discarded. But it cannot be put in kerbside recycling bins because it is very difficult and thus expensive to recycle and the blister packs end up in landfill.

Two UK companies specialise in recycling blisterpacks--the aluminium into ingot, and the plastic into plastic building board or similar. But the value of the product is not nearly enough to pay for the cost of recycling. The company we work with sends us a cardboard box as a flat pack; we then fill it with blister packs and they send a courier to collect it. For this service, we pay them £108 per box. There are some generous businesses which are prepared to pay for these boxes and to allow blister packs to be deposited in them and buy another box when the first one gets full. But this approach is very patchy, and many communities do not have access to such a service.

Our approach is to find people who are prepared to donate towards a starter box to any new community which wants to be affiliated with us. The donated box is sent to the new group. They announce to their community that the box will be available for depositing blister backs for one morning every two months or so, and that they will be asked to contribute £1 for every 50 blister packs to replace this box when it is full. The box may take two or three months to fill but by then there will be enough contributed money to buy another box.

The details of how the aluminium and plastic in blister pack are separated is explained here for those interested

We believe that this approach can enable communities, large and small, to significantly reduce the number of blister packs going to landfill.


Our Communities (so far)



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