Old TV disposal

Upgrading to a shinier, sleeker new television is one of life’s indulgent little joys, but it doesn’t happen all that often – which means that you’re probably not getting rid of old TVs regularly. So how best to recycle or dispose of your old TV set?

When should I replace my old TV?

Many of us will replace our old TVs as a ‘need’ rather than a ‘want’ – with amazing new technology being discovered all the time, we often go for an upgrade rather than replacing a broken TV set. In this case, proper disposal of the old TV is more important than ever to reduce the amount of unnecessary waste being created – and there are plenty of options.

But if you’re concerned your TV has reached the end of its life, how do you know when it’s time to replace your old set?

Of course, if your screen is completely broken, it’s time to say goodbye – mostly because it’s usually far cheaper to replace a screen than it is to buy a new TV. But there are other signs you might be due a new set: dead pixels (a small black or green dot in the picture), which can be expensive to fix; colour distortion, which is a sure sign that your TV has a problem; line patterns appearing across the screen; faded or fuzzy picture; and what’s known as screen burn, where a previous image appears ‘burned’ into your TV set.

While some of these issues can be fixed, they can be expensive – it depends how much you can live with the issues being caused by the problem, and (of course) whether or not the problem is a sign of a more dangerous issue. For example, lines and bars showing up on the screen can indicate a connector is loose somewhere either externally or inside the TV set – this could be a fire hazard, and is definitely a sign it’s time to replace your TV.

What should I do with my old TV?

You have two main options when it comes to getting rid of old TVs: reusing, or recycling.

Both stop your old TV set from going to landfill, and there are plenty of options for both – some of which could earn you a few quid, make someone else’s day, or support a charity.

Reusing your old TV set

Smart waste disposal centres around reducing, reusing, and recycling. It makes sense, then, that your first port of call when getting rid of your old TV is to reuse it. If you’re wondering what to do with an old TV that still works, the most environmentally friendly (and sometimes wallet friendly) option is to find a new owner for your old TV.

Can I sell my old TV?

Local social media groups offer a perfect opportunity for you to make a few pounds by selling your old TV, and often means you’ll give someone the chance to get a working TV for much cheaper – a good deal for your wallet and the environment.

There are also selling sites such as eBay, Gumtree, and Facebook Marketplace where you can list your old TV for sale and earn a few pounds in the process. Beware of unscrupulous buyers and always insist on payment before you hand over your old TV – while selling sites make it a breeze to find a new home for your unwanted items, it’s important to remember you’re dealing with complete strangers and act accordingly.

Take good quality photos in decent light; write an accurate listing (including an honest assessment of the item’s condition – while a few scratches here and there won’t phase most second-hand buyers, not mentioning any faults or a missing remote control will definitely result in demands for a refund); and set a realistic price – you may have paid £400 for it when it waqs new, but second hand electricals don’t tend to sell for megabucks. Take a look at what price others are putting on similar items as a good rule of thumb.

Could I give my old TV away to someone else?

Do you have a family member who could use your old TV – an elderly relative, perhaps, or a child who’d love their own?

This makes a great first port of call for reusing your old television.

If you’d like to get rid of your old TV quickly to make room for the new one, listing for free on local social media sites or websites such as Freecycle usually get a speedy response from eagle-eyed bargain hunters.

Passing it on will get rid of your old TV set without creating unnecessary waste – and you could make someone’s day, too.

Can I donate my old TV to charity?

You could certainly consider donating to a charity – some charities, like British Heart Foundation, have larger stores where they sell larger items such as electricals, or you could speak to local charities which help set people in difficult circumstances up in new homes. This website includes a tool to help you locate a local or national charity where your old, working TV could make a real difference.

There are electricals-specific charities who will help recycle your old TV, too: WEEE Charity is a great example, an organisation which recycles electrical waste responsible and refurbishes them for future use if possible. Search for electrical waste charities in your area for a great way to ensure your old TV is disposed of properly or reused where possible.

Many charities will organise collections if booked in advance, so you needn’t worry about transport – otherwise, they have drop off points where you can leave your old TV for donation.

Recycling your old TV set

If you can’t reuse your TV, or you want to dispose of a broken TV, then recycling is your next best option.

Can I part-exchange my old TV?

A number of TV manufacturers and retailers have recycling schemes for old TV sets, allowing you to trade in your old TV and receive a discount on your new one: Samsung, for example, will accept any 32” or larger television via certain retailers. While you don’t receive any cash for them, both Currys PC World and AO run in-store recycling schemes, allowing you to drop your old TV into the store at dedicated recycling points. Your old TV set is then recycled in line with the Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment directive, an environmental initiative designed to ensure electrical goods are recycled correctly, rather than being sent directly to landfill sites.

If I can’t recycle my old TV at a specific recycling scheme, what else can I do?

If you don’t need to want to take your old TV to a retailer (or there isn’t a store near you), there are still ways to recycle your old TV – you can recycle these and larger items at Household Waste Recycling Centres.

Not all recycling centres accept electricals, so it’s important to check your local authority website for specific guidance before you turn up, or use this handy locator tool to find your nearest electrical recycling point.

Will the council collect my old TV?

If you can’t get to the tip – for example, if you don’t have a car, work unusual hours or have mobility issues – and have exhausted all other options, you still have options for disposing of your old TV.

In some areas, the local authorities will collect small electrical items as part of their kerbside collection – so you can leave them by your bin during your normal collection. It’s best to check on your local authority website or give them a call – use this link to find a web address or phone number – to find out if this is the case in your area. If so, you’ll be able to leave your old TV with your non-recyclable waste on bin collection day and it’ll be taken away and dealt with.

Recyclable materials being placed in black bags in Wales

The Welsh Government says this is essential for reaching its recycling targets

According to new figures announced by the Welsh Government, one quarter of black bag waste in Wales is still made up of food, whilst another quarter is possibly made up of recyclable material.

The Welsh Government says that these findings could be the key as to whether the country reaches its recycling targets before time.

It claims that if only half of all the food and recyclable materials placed in black bags across Wales was recycled, the country could reach its sanctioned 2025 recycling target, which is 70%, a staggering nine years earlier.

Registered charity WRAP, have revealed that in Wales, there has been a 14% increase in the amount of residential recyclable materials being recycled but that refuse bins throughout Wales are still being stuffed with numerous items that could be re-used or recycled.

The study also revealed that 17% of electrical waste and electronic equipment and 50% of textiles and clothing, were still being sent to landfill sites, along with food waste and dry recyclable items.

Cabinet Secretary for Environment and Rural Affairs, Lesley Griffiths said: “It’s great to see people’s recycling habits are significantly improving. However, this research shows there’s still more we can do to meet our aim of being a zero waste nation by 2050.”

Towards Zero Waste: One Wales One Planet – is the Welsh Government’s plan of action when it comes to waste. Its aim is to see Wales become a high recycling nation by 2025 and a zero waste nation by 2050.

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Solar panel recycling growth forecasted by 2050

As the global solar panel industry grows, so too will the recycling potential

According to a joint report, end-of-life solar panel recycling could be worth $15 billion by 2050, as experts says the average lifespan of a solar panel is around 30 years.

The International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) and the International Energy Agency’s Photovoltaic Power Systems Programme have published the report claiming that the recycling of used solar panels could prove to be big business in the not so distant future.

Solar panel recycling to be worth $50bn by 2050

Solar panel recycling to be worth $50bn by 2050

 

Solar panel use is on the rise across the globe, as it offers sustainable and affordable energy solutions for new housing and industrial buildings, as global population levels rise and emerging economies record yet more financial success.

The director general of IRENA, Adnan Amin, said: “Global installed PV capacity reached 222GW at the end of 2015 and is expected to further rise to 4,500 GW by 2050.”

The research as published in the report, suggests that solar panel waste could be as much as 78 million tonnes by 2050. China accounts for a significant percentage of this waste production, at a projected 20 million tonnes of PV panel waste.

Recycled materials and components from waste solar panels can be used for the manufacturing of new panels or sold into the global resource material industry. The report is confidant that the solar panel industry will benefit significantly from the recycling of end-of-life panels, as a circular economy will result in a self-sufficient sector.

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Cost-cutting hairdresser fined for waste offences

West Yorkshire salon manager fined £2,000 for not holding a business waste contract

A West Yorkshire hairdresser has been fined in Leeds Magistrates’ Court for waste offences, including the illegal disposing of business waste and forging a receipt for waste disposal.

Carl Deacey, manager at Arena Hair Studio, situated in Wetherby, was not in possession of a business waste contract when he was contacted by Leeds City Council environmental officers in August last year.

Hairdresser fined for using public bins for trade waste

The hairdressers in Wetherby

 

The council officers had received complaints from the public that the hairdressing salon was using town centre public waste bins to dispose of its commercial waste.

Therefore, environmental officers handed Mr Deacey a legal notice demanding him to prove, with paper documentation, that his business had a valid waste management contract with a certified waste operator.

The hairdresser supplied the council officers with a waste disposal receipt, however, following an investigation, it was found that Mr Deacey had paid a waste contractor to forge a fake receipt. It emerged that Arena Hair Studio had not been in possession of a waste contract since it was established 35 years ago.

Mr Deacey appeared in Leeds Magistrates’ Court and was fined £2,000 under the Environmental Protection Act 1990 after pleading guilty to the waste offences.

Judging magistrates said that forging the documentation was a serious offence and disposing of business waste in council public bins was potentially harmful to the public’s health.

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Waste bosses meet to discuss EU referendum

‘Resourcing the Future’ conference held to debate the EU referendum and how leaving could affect the industry

Debate was raging at the final meeting for the ‘Resourcing the Future’ conference held in London last week, as waste bosses discussed Britain’s future in the European Union in relation to the waste industry.

Arguing to remain in the EU, Suez UK chief executive and president of the European Federation of Waste Management and Environmental Services, David Palmer-Jones asked the conference attendees: “What has the EU ever done for us?”

He then mentioned a number of waste improvements, including Britain’s 44 per cent recycling rate and the creation of landfill tax revenue, which have apparently been achieved solely because of Britain’s EU membership.

Mr Palmer-Jones finished off his argument by answering his initial question: “In terms of what the EU has done for us, it’s absolutely everything.”

However, on behalf of the leave argument, Neil Grundon, deputy chairman at Grundon Waste Management, took to the stage to claim that the UK was a leading nation in environmental matters.

He said: “I really don’t think that we are going to be any less of a force in our environmental conscience and our environmental pressure on the world as an independent nation.”

Mr Grundon used Britain’s excellent health and safety in the workplace record as an example of how Britain does not need the EU to be a world leader.

Angus Evers, from the UK Environmental Law Association (UKELA), had his time to discuss legal procedures for the waste industry following a remain or leave vote, saying that a remain would be “business as usual”, but a leave would involve “massive uncertainty” which could affect investment.

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The primary school pupils creating a recycling handbook

The recycling project is designed to educate and encourage children to recycle

An electrical and electronic waste company based in Lancashire has initiated a recycling project amongst primary school children across the country, as they work together to author a WEEE recycling manual designed to educate young people on the importance of recycling their electronics.

The handbook, titled ‘Responsible Recycling’, has been passed from primary school to primary school across the UK and follows the adventures of R3PIC, a robot made up of recycled electronics, and the mascot of REPIC Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment, the Bury-based company behind the project.

School pupils write recycling manual for WEEE

Click on the website link above to read about R3PIC’s adventures

 

Year 3 and 4 pupils from each school have the opportunity to write a chapter each, detailing the imaginative recycling adventures of R3PIC. The story is now being completed by pupils in Bradford and Solihull before it goes off to be produced into an illustrated edition later this year.

As part of the ‘Responsible Recycling’ project, Bury Council’s recycling awareness officer, Talat Afzal, visited the schools involved to speak to the children about recycling and how it is an essential process to help save our environment.

WEEE waste firm, REPIC, launched the project in an effort to educate young people as they are now surrounded by an increasing amount of electronic equipment and gadgets.

Dr Philip Morton, chief executive of REPIC, told BuryTimes.co.uk: “The main aim of the campaign is to educate children on recycling issues from a young age. Children are the ambassadors of the future for recycling and are key in spreading the message to parents and carers.”

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Bureau of International Recycling launches new initiative

The BIR is to launch a World Council of Recycling Associations to support the recycling industry

On May 31, the Bureau of International Recycling (BIR) announced plans to launch a ‘world recycling council’ initiative, which would consist of the heads of worldwide recycling organisations and associations.

The BIR World Council of Recycling Associations would bring together world recycling leaders and experts to create an association which would work ‘to tackle the challenges facing the global trade of recyclables’ by promoting ‘free and fair trade of recyclables with minimum regulatory controls’.

The BIR, based in Brussels, was founded in 1948. It works to support companies and associations involved in the global recycling and waste material industry.

Currently, the BIR has almost 800 member companies worldwide from the business sector and national sector, which trade internationally in recycled metals, paper, plastics and textiles.

Ranjit Baxi, the president at BIR, compared the proposed World Council of Recycling Associations to a “United Nations of recycling”. He hopes the new council will attract yet more companies and associations to BIR from more countries.

Currently, BIR member companies represent 70 countries across the globe, but Mr Baxi would like to see this increase to ‘80 to 90 of the world’s more than 200 countries’.

During the 2016 World Recycling Convention and Exhibition, which was hosted by BIR between May 30 and June 1 in Berlin, Mr Baxi also said he hoped the bureau’s World Recycling Day ambitions would be realised by 2017, which would help promote the importance of recycling and the recycling industry.

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Environment Committee for the EU wants a 70% recycling rate

The Committee has called for changes to be made to the Waste Framework Directive

Changes to the Waste Framework Directive have been recommended by the European Parliament’s Environment Committee, which wants to increase the municipal recycling rate to 70% by the year 2030.

This new figure has increased by 5% over last years proposed package figure of 65%.

European Committee wants to increase the recycling rate target to 70%

European Committee wants to increase the recycling rate target to 70%

 

The Environment Committee is calling for tougher requirements for separate recyclable collections, which concern items that are placed in our blue bins.

Rapporteur MEP Simona Bonafè is responsible for the new proposals. She has also suggested a ban on incinerating waste that is collected separately and has set a recycling target of 65% for organic waste by 2025.

Other final targets have also been suggested by the Environment Committee; 70% by 2025 for packaging recycling, increasing to 80% by 2030. A target of 25% by 2025 has also been proposed for the reduction of landfill.

It is now up to the MEPs to decide whether they will accept the new proposals.

The new changes to the Commission’s original proposals have been welcomed by the Resource Association, who say that they are a crucial and valuable contribution to the discussion.

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Volunteers needed to help clean up UK beaches

The Marine Conservation Society is calling on volunteers to help with the annual beach clean up event

‘The Great British Beach Clean’ is set to take place over a September weekend and the Marine Conservation Society (MCS) is calling on the public to volunteer their services to help tidy up Britain’s beaches.

The annual beach cleaning event has been running for 23 years; last year’s clean up attracted the support of over 6,000 volunteers who took to 340 UK beaches, picking up a total of 3,298 pieces of litter; a record for the event.

The Marine Conservation Society is calling on volunteers to help tidy Britain's beaches

‘The Great British Beach Clean Up’ is to take place in September

 

UK charity, Marine Conservation Society (MCS), is dedicated to the care of Britain’s shorelines and seas and the sea life and wildlife that inhabits these environments. The society’s Great British Beach Clean Up event is being held as part of the International Ocean Clean-up, organised by the Ocean Conservancy.

Last year’s International Coastal Cleanup was held across 93 countries worldwide. Volunteers collected a total of 8,193 tonnes of litter from over 25,000 miles of international coastline. Cigarettes butts, plastic bottles, and food packaging (crisp packets, etc), were the three types of waste collected most by the volunteers.

Eunomia Research & Consulting says that beaches should be the focus in the fight against plastic ocean pollution. According to Eunomia, more plastic is found on beaches than on the ocean surface, which implies that beach clean ups have a very significant impact on the level of plastic in the world’s oceans.

The MCS is therefore calling for ‘urgent’ help for the September beach clean up, which is to take place between Friday 16 and Monday 19. If you’re interested in taking part in the British beach clean up, visit the Marine Conservation Society website for more information.

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Welsh town sets up petition to stop recycling centre closure

Buckley residents concerned about the proposed closure of their popular household recycling centre

Residents in the Welsh town of Buckley have launched a petition to the council to prevent the closure of the local household recycling centre.

Flintshire County Council is due to close three recycling centres across the district, including in Buckley, Flint and Connah’s Quay. According to Buckley councillor, Dennis Hutchinson, the council has been ‘skewing’ the facts in favour of the recycling centre at Nercwys, near Mold.

 

Flintshire could close three of its recycling centres

Flintshire County Council HQ

 

Councillor Hutchinson said that the Buckley recycling centre is the most used site of the six that are located throughout Flintshire. Figures suggest that the Buckley recycling site processed more waste material last year compared to any of the other sites.

Flintshire County Council figures show that Nercwys recycled 75.1 per cent of the 5,103 tonnes of waste it processed last year. While Buckley processed 6,797 tonnes of household waste and recycled 68.8 per cent.

A report produced for Flintshire’s Environment and Overview Scrutiny Committee said that the Buckley site has a poor recycling rate and that it was too small and was in the midst of protected land.

Councillor Hutchinson said: “I have grave concerns over the proposed closure of arguably one of the best managed and maintained sites in Flintshire, serving a great deal of residents.”

Residents living in and around Buckley agree with Councillor Hutchinson and have set up a petition to Flintshire Country Council to try and stop the closure of the much-used recycling centre. The petition has now reached almost 30,000 signatures and residents believe that the council cannot now ignore this level of protest.

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