Ireland has just launched a scheme to charge a deposit on bottles and cans which is refunded when consumers return them to recycling machines in supermarkets.
The Irish have set up a non profit making company to manage the scheme, funded by the drinks making firms, which should avoid the financial problems that have dogged the industry in the United States.
Many privately owned American recycling companies are in danger of going out of business because the fee they get from state governments, under the Bottle Bill, has not been increased for years, even though their costs have soared.
Produced and presented by Russell Padmore
(Picture: Reverse vending machines for Ireland’s new deposit return recycling scheme)
Capturing CO2 from the air
The growth of 'quiet luxury'
Business Daily meets: ILO Director-General Gilbert Houngbo
Is tidal power a viable energy source?
The billion-dollar rise of Padel
How do you keep food cold?
Will high interest rates be cut soon?
Business Daily meets: Leigh Steinberg
Is Saudi Arabia softening its alcohol ban?
Why is Temu so cheap?
Would green hydrogen be a drain on Uruguay's water sources?
Business Daily meets: CEO of Proton Andy Yen
Stockholm: The capital of music tech?
Nato: Who’s spending what?
The sugar price surge
European farming’s existential crisis?
Business Daily meets: Ben Ainslie
The repercussions of the Hollywood strikes
Disruption and drought in the Panama Canal
Tourism’s sustainability ambitions
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The emPOWERed Half Hour
Global News Podcast
The Infinite Monkey Cage
Friday Night Comedy from BBC Radio 4
You’re Dead to Me
Elis James and John Robins