Australia   Steel Recycling Reached 70% In Europe

16/12/2009

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The latest figures from APEAL (the Association of European Producers of Steel for Packaging) show that 70 per cent of steel packaging is recycled in Europe.

This represents over 2.5 million tonnes of food and drinks cans and other steel containers being recycled in 2008, saving 3.9 million tonnes of CO2.

According to the latest available data, this places recycling rates for steel above those of other packaging materials such as plastic, beverage cartons and glass (29 per cent1, 33 per cent2 and 62 per cent3 respectively).

Top performer

Steel's outstanding performance owes much to its unique material properties. Its magnetic abilities make it the easiest and most cost effective material to sort and recover. When household waste is recycled, these magnetic properties enable steel packaging to be easily separated from cartons, plastic, and other packaging materials. Unlike other materials, steel loses none of its strength or inherent qualities - no matter how many times it is recycled.

Made to be recycled

Another reason for steel's continued recycling success is that the recycling process is embedded into steel production. Put simply: to make steel, you have to use recycled steel. This means that every steel plant is a recycling plant, producing steel of virgin quality while saving valuable resources. Complementing this is a network of well established routes for collection and recovery of steel cans across Europe, which has helped to ensure recycling excellence.

Saving energy and carbon

By integrating recycled steel into the manufacturing process the industry achieves energy savings of 70 per cent and lowers its output of CO2. In fact, each item of recycled steel packaging saves one-and-a-half times its weight of CO2. So the more steel is recycled, the more CO2 emissions are reduced."Once again steel is setting the standard for recycling across Europe and demonstrating that by recycling we can make an important contribution to reducing CO2 emissions," said Guillaume de Formanoir, President of APEAL.

In 2008, the recycling rate for steel packaging continued to grow throughout Europe, rising by 1.4 per cent from the 2007 total. Belgium was once again Europe's recycling champion, where 93 per cent of steel packaging was recycled, while Germany, Luxembourg and the Netherlands followed closely behind, recycling over 87 per cent of their steel containers.

1 Source: Plastics Europe (2008), 2 Source: ACE (2008), 3 Source: FEVE (2007)

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