Thursday, June 30, 2011
New all in one recycling bins
Tuesday, June 28, 2011
"Want a way out of the recession? Create jobs by saving resources"
"The core is high labour costs with low prices on protecting the environment and saving resources. This reflects a perception of scarce labour and abundant resources. The result is efforts to save labour (increase conventional productivity) and hold the floodgates open for use of resources. And it worked; that's why unemployement refuses to fall - we are successful in our endeavours to reduce labour per unit of output. On top of that, current wage levels make it cost-effective to invest in emerging economies. Resources are still priced in as a plentiful factor irrespective of recent hikes in commodity prices telling a different story. The price mechanism does not punish, as it should, using more resources than necessary per unit of output. Despite various financial incentives, it is cheap to pollute; consequently, waste flows into the environment. The combined result is unemployment, resource waste and deterioration of the environment... The new paradigm calls for exactly the opposite. Rising scarcities of commodities make it profitable to cut down o nthe use of resources in the production process. Abundance of labour... calls for more use of manpower. The key is to face the music and start the politically agonosing, economically necessary and ecologically imperative process of changing relative factor prices. Labour costs (wages) must fall relative to commodity prices - otherwise it won't happen and we will stay where we are right now, like it or not."
Sunday, April 10, 2011
Waste Management In Taipei
And the results?
- Taipei's 2.7m people produced 1,619 tonnes of trash a day in 2010 vs 3,695 tonnes before 2000
- Recycling rates up from 2.4% to 43%
- Taipei's only landfill is now an ecological park, having been idle since the beginning of 2011- 3 incineration plants operating at below capacity because of less-than-expected trash
- Taipei residents pay on average NT$51 a month in 2010 vs NT$144 a decade ago
- Per capita CO2 emissions were 4.2 tonnes in 2008, lower than the average of 4.6 tonnes among 22 major Asian cities surveyed by the EIU in 2010
- System costs government NT$3.1bn a year to run, vs revenues of NT$400m from the sale of garbage bags
I think the charging for collection bags, even if for only a nominal fee, is nifty as it accomplishes 2 things - (1) the nominal charge will make most people conscious about their volume of general waste, and (2) more importantly though, it will make people conscious about separating recyclables from the general trash pool (so they use less of the chargeable trash bags). It is amazing how many people still do not make an effort to recycle, and recycling has to start from consciousness at the individual level.