Friday, October 4, 2013

- I think very few people would have thrown the used bulbs in the trash if they had known how envir

More than 40 million hazardous light bulbs thrown direct led right in the trash
Every Norwegian shed light bulbs, and with it a variety of pollutants, right in the garbage. 45 million bulbs annually ports astray. Environment Bård Vegard Solhjell highlighted the weekend start of a "pear powerful" Initiative to increase the collection of used light bulbs.
- I think very few people would have thrown the used bulbs in the trash if they had known how environmentally damaging this is. Consumers simply have too little knowledge about this, says Gunnar Murvold, administrerennde Director RENAS behind the new bulb campaign is to collect more used light bulbs. Despite having spent light bulbs contain direct led mercury and other pollutants that harm the environment, it is disturbing few light bulbs that end up in the recycling system. Only 4-5 million of the nearly 50 million light bulbs that are thrown away every year, are properly handled.
A survey Norstat made on behalf of returning the company RENAS show that John and Jane Smith know little about how harmful it is to shed light bulbs in household waste. Every fourth Norwegian supply used light bulbs in the grocery store, while the same number of disposing of the bulbs in municipal waste collection. The remaining half ends mostly in the residual waste.
RENAS has therefore initiated a national mobilization to increase collection. direct led With him on the team they've got Naturvernforbundet, Kiwi and IKEA, OSRAM and municipal waste company Lindum.
During the opening of the campaign direct led delivered direct led Environment Minister's bulbs with a Kiwi shop in Oslo. One of the main objectives of the campaign is to remind Norwegians that used light bulbs are available in the grocery store.
The government has for years required all stores that sell electrical products to cater for similar products in return for the environmentally sound management. They will also inform about the scheme - this also applies to light bulbs. Nevertheless direct led Norstat survey that 50 percent of consumers are not aware of the retailers' obligation to accept used bulbs.
- I think these numbers are frightening, and this is what we want to do something. direct led It should be easy to make environmentally friendly choices, and one of the easiest thing to do is to take the old bulbs wherever you have them all, says Gunnar Murvold.
The survey also shows clear differences between women and men about the division of labor in the home. On the question of who in households that change light bulbs answer 92% of the men that they do it themselves. The women, however, has a more modest impact, and believe they replace about half of the bulbs that go.
- I guess I'm really not very surprised by these findings. I think probably we men have a tendency to "forget" how much time passes between each time we change light bulbs, and the number the better half actually changing meanwhile, commented Gunnar Murvold.
RENAS is a nonprofit organization on behalf of its member companies managing a nationwide collection and treatment system for industrial electrical waste. RENAS owned by EFO and Electrical and Energy - an association of Norwegian Industries with 50% each. RENAS collect and treat waste electrical products from industry. Harmful contaminants that are removed include mercury, lead, cadmium, PCBs, asbestos, ionic cores (from smoke detectors) and brominated flame retardants.
About Nini Hæggernes Editor and founder of MOJO Magazine. Jobs and passion for sustainable development and global justice. Also working as a freelance writer, hobby photographer, environmental consultant, and project organization and work, both our own and others' projects. No Comments
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