I'm sure that the companies involved make a profit. Businesses are in business to make a profit and, contrary to the views of socialists in the media, the government and on AAM, making a profit is a good thing.We have all been very good at separating our household rubbish and recycling it. I heard somewhere that it went from 15% to 85% of people separating and recycling in just a few years. I was just wondering if there was much profit from the average Green Bin for the recycling industries. Bottles/Paper/Plastic etc
it depends who or what you are making the profit on though!
I'm sure that the companies involved make a profit. Businesses are in business to make a profit and, contrary to the views of socialists in the media, the government and on AAM, making a profit is a good thing.
You do by default as green bins are emptied for free whereas all other waste is charged for.
Is it possible for the owner of the waste, the householder, to make the profit instead of the businesses, I wonder?
if you are paying 8,75 euro per bin, why are they charging you 100 euro per year?
Read again what Tarfhead wrote:if you are paying 8,75 euro per bin, why are they charging you 100 euro per year?
The €100 covers the green and brown - and possibly part of the black bin cost too.There's an annual charge of around €100 and then a seperate payment (€8.75) for each black bin collected...
You do by default as green bins are emptied for free whereas all other waste is charged for.
Other than that, buy Greenstar off the receivers and see how you get on.
You do by default as green bins are emptied for free whereas all other waste is charged for.
I see that you can sell a black bag of unwanted clothes for about €10 depending on weight.
Would crushed cans in bulk be of interest to anyone?
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