this post was submitted on 07 Dec 2025
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Post memes here.
A meme is an idea, behavior, or style that spreads by means of imitation from person to person within a culture and often carries symbolic meaning representing a particular phenomenon or theme.
An Internet meme or meme, is a cultural item that is spread via the Internet, often through social media platforms. The name is by the concept of memes proposed by Richard Dawkins in 1972. Internet memes can take various forms, such as images, videos, GIFs, and various other viral sensations.
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That's an interesting question! My first reaction was "I'm not sure, but definitely more than 50%", but then I remembered that's the yield of our separation plant. I'll try to find some numbers on recovery percentages this week and update this post to give a general idea.
Once it leaves our plant, it should be recycled at high yields, because otherwise no one would bother since reworking plastic waste to raw materials takes lots of energy. And like I said, virgin plastics are dirt cheap. Some first considerations; we extract plastics like PET, PP (solid), PE (solid and film) as mono streams for higher end recycling, and a stream of mixed plastics containing all of the previous for low value recycling. There are other outputs like ferrous and non-ferrous metals, milk cartons and residual material.
Interesting! Yeah, please update / comment if you find anything.
Uhhhh, I'd be veeeery interested in knowing percentages for recycling of Tetra pak style packaging. Their website makes it sound like it's super easy to recycle them but I'd think it would be almost impossible to get this glued together mess of paper, plastic and other stuff recycled (I'd love to be wrong about that, obviously). I also read somewhere that there's like one plant in the UK that can actually recycle these but no idea if that is accurate.
I have no idea how Tetra pak is recycled to be honest, my guess is probably by dissolving the paper in water and burning the plastic/aluminium. A coworker of mine once looked into shredding them and feeding them to an anorganic digester in order to produce biogas. According to him it gave some nice gas yields in the lab tests.
I'll fetch some general numbers on raw material recovery tomorrow and report back.
Thank you 😸