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The Glossary
Contaminant:
Any material harmful to the recycling process when
included with recyclable material.
Converter:
An industrial process in which a
processed material is made into a specific product. An example would be the
manufacture of envelopes from the required grade of paper.
Grade:
A class of
secondary material that is distinguished from similar classes on the basis of
quality, appearance, use, content, density or other factors.
High-grade waste
paper: Waste paper with the most value, consisting of pulp substitute and
de-inking high grade categories. Low-grade waste paper: Commonly referred to as
bulk grades, usually of lesser value, consists of newspaper, corrugated and
mixed paper.
Mill broke:
Waste generated within the paper-making process
(normally returned to the process within the same mill).
Post-consumer
materials:
These are finished products or other materials that have served
their intended use and been discarded for disposal or recovery. For the
products in this Guide, they are considered to be those which have completed
all stages of the production process, and have arrived at the final point of
sale or distribution. This would, therefore, include such items as unsold
newspapers, or out-of-date letterheads, even though they may not strictly have
been used for their final purpose. It would not include unsaleable or unusable
goods damaged in the production process, or overruns, which have not left the
printer's or converter's premises.
Pre-consumer materials:
Production wastes or
factory scrap generated by manufacturers and product converters, for example,
trimmings, damaged or obsolete goods, and overruns. Uncontaminated with other
materials, they can be fed straight back into the production system, resulting
in high quality goods. Plastics and steel shavings are routinely recycled in
this manner. Alternative terms in regular use are: post-industrial waste or
industrial waste, process scrap, and manufacturing waste, with different
industries tending to use different terms.
Post-use:
With particular reference
to plastic, this is defined as "Materials collected from outside the individual
manufacturing industry after it has been used for its primary purpose. This can
include material from agricultural use, commercial, industrial, retailing,
distribution and domestic outlets, but in all cases the material will have been
used for the purpose for which it was manufactured." (British Polythene
Industries 1994)
Pulp substitutes:
Unprinted, clean waste paper that can be
used directly in paper making as a substitute for wood pulp.
Reconditioning:
Making a product suitable for reuse, perhaps by cleaning and repairing it.
Often applied to packaging materials, such as cartons or tanks.
Recovered
materials:
This is a broad term, covering both 'pre-consumer' and
'post-consumer' materials which would otherwise be regarded as 'waste'.
Recycling:
The collection and separation of materials from the waste stream and
subsequent processing to produce marketable products. Recycling differs from
product re-use because of the need to process the recovered material to realise
its value. The most desirable form of recycling, environmentally and
economically, is when the recycling process creates products that are of
comparable, or only slightly lowered, quality to the original. Energy savings
are often quite significant in this high-grade recycling. An example is
aluminium, which can be recycled again and again without losing any of its
properties. Glass is another example. Some materials, notably paper, do suffer
a loss of quality on being recycled, and this limits the number of times
recycling can occur. However there are many applications that do not require a
high quality, bleached white paper product, for example, toilet tissue and
paper towels.
Recyclable:
This is a term often used loosely, and sometimes
misleadingly, on products. For example, just because a product is 'recyclable'
does not mean it is environmentally benign. Most products have some
environmental impact when the entire lifespan is taken into consideration. Even
if a product is technically 'recyclable', collection facilities may not exist
in a particular locality.
Recycled content:
The term 'recycled' does not mean
that a product contains 100% recovered materials. Nor does it mean that a
product contains post-consumer materials. Recycled means that a product
contains some recovered materials. 'Recycled content' can vary from small
percentages of pre-consumer to 100% post-consumer materials.
Recycled
feedstock:
Material that has been recovered from the waste stream and is
suitable for manufacturing new products.
Remanufacturing:
A process of
refurbishing a manufactured article in order to extend its lifespan. The term
is frequently used for toner cartridges for photocopiers and laser printers
whereby the original cartridge is checked for wear, parts replaced if
necessary, and refilled for further use. In the Guide it is also applied to
traditional activities such as tyre retreading.
Reprocessing:
A fairly general
term which is used to covers a range of industrial activities including
recycling.
Re-refining: Refining of a material which has been refined already.
This may be oil, solvents or other chemical product.
Reuse:
Reuse of containers
and/or packaging in the original form, either by householders, or via the
manufacturer, without reprocessing.
Secondary material:
Recyclable materials
such as waste paper and scrap metals.
Source reduction:
Waste prevention
actions taken close to the source of waste generation, i.e. the point at which
changed behaviour or direct action can reduce the volume of waste generated
that would otherwise be recycled, incinerated or dumped in landfills. Source
reduction is therefore an approach that precedes waste management by addressing
how products are manufactured, purchased and used. Without waste prevention,
everything else can only ever be a second-best option.
Source separation:
The
separation of individual secondary materials at the point of generation for
recycling.
Sustainable consumption:
The United Nations Environment Programme's
Oslo Symposium 1994 used the following working definition, "the use of goods
and services that respond to basic needs and bring a better quality of life,
while minimising the use of natural resources, toxic materials and emissions of
waste and pollutants over the life cycle, so as not to jeopardise the needs of
future generations."
Waste:
Any substance or object which the holder discards
or intends or is required to discard is considered as waste (EU Directive
75/442).
Woodfree:
A technical term meaning paper which has been made by
chemical process, during which lignin is extracted from the wood.
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