èƵ

Competition winners: Your trash tracked

Last year, 10 èƵ readers won the chance to take part in the Trash Track experiment. What happened to the stuff they threw away?

Guess where my contents are headed?
Guess where my contents are headed?
(Image: Darren Greenwood/Design Pics/Rex Features)
Mapping out the UK's rubbish disposal (Image èƵ)
Mapping out the UK’s rubbish disposal (Image èƵ)

What really happens to the stuff you throw away? In an exclusive competition launched last year, 10 readers in the UK won the chance to find out by taking part in the “trash tracking” experiment we ran in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s .

The objects our winners chose to tag and throw away ranged from a plastic bottle to an old computer. The tracking results are now in. While the prototype tracker technology didn’t prove 100 per cent reliable, the cases where it worked give a good indication of how the country’s rubbish is being disposed of.

See more: the map of where the trackers went

Tag 987

Winner: James Brown            

Item: plastic milk bottle

Starting point: Trantlebeg, Sutherland

End point: Grangemouth, Stirlingshire

Do local-authority waste collectors really recycle the plastic waste we diligently separate from the rest of our rubbish? That’s what James Brown, whose Scottish Highland home is far from any recycling centre, wanted to find out. He tagged an old milk bottle and dropped it in his recycling bin. The bottle travelled 400 kilometres, via two depots, to a recycling plant in Grangemouth. In the Highlands at least, it seems that sorting your rubbish is worth the effort.

Tag 952

Winner: Shaun Baker       

Item: smoke detector       

Starting point: Stafford

End point: ǴDZ

Shaun Baker wondered if a smoke alarm would require specialised disposal as it contained a radioactive source. However, radiation levels in smoke alarms are too low for them to be classed as radioactive material when disposed of. The alarm was treated as ordinary electronic waste and sent to Liverpool to be shredded. Metal and plastics were separated and the plastics sent on for further recycling. The metal will be sold to refineries for reuse.

Tag 976

Winner: Nick Hunn         

Item:

Starting point: Edgware, London

End point: ܲ԰ԴǷɲ

Nick Hunn was preparing to scrap his 10-year-old car under the government’s scrappage scheme. As the car wasn’t in poor condition, Hunn tagged it to see if it really would be scrapped. Sadly, the tracker signal disappeared, so the car’s fate remains a mystery.

Tag 966

Winner: Tanya Heasman                

Item: cuddly toy                

Starting point: Waterloo, London

End point: ܲ԰ԴǷɲ

Tanya Heasman’s children love finding lost toys or “treasure” around the streets of London. They wanted to know what would happen to one of their own treasures if it was left in the street for another child to find. Unfortunately, after being left near Waterloo station, the toy and its tag immediately went missing.

Tag 950

Winner: Alex Dragoi                

Item:

Starting point: Crystal Palace, London

End point: ܲ԰ԴǷɲ

Alex Dragoi wanted to know what would happen to an unwanted bicycle left for recycling in London, but beyond his home no tracker signal was seen.

Tag 973

Winner: Chris Hamley                

Item: dzܳٱ

Starting point: Marlborough, Wiltshire

End point: Newbury, Berkshire

We often hear stories about our electronic waste polluting the environment in poor countries, so Chris Hamley chose to tag an old computer he was dropping off for recycling. Encouragingly, it did not travel far. Hamley’s computer was broken up and shredded 30 kilometres away in Newbury, where the components were separated and the metals sold on to refineries elsewhere in the UK.

Tag 990

Winner: Gudrun Gaudian                

Item: multicoloured leather schoolbag

Starting point: Alne, North Yorkshire

End point: Northallerton, North Yorkshire

Gudrun Gaudian was curious to find out what would become of a multicoloured leather bag collected from her local school in the village of Alne by Bag2School, a business that buys unwanted school bags in the UK and sells them on where they are needed. The bag wound up in a sorting depot outside Northallerton, 35 kilometres away, most probably bound for eastern Europe, where another child may yet use it to carry their school books.

Tag 985

Winner: Vince Sellars                

Item: electric water pump                

Starting point: Gleadless, Sheffield

End point: Boston, Lincolnshire

What becomes of electrical equipment we leave at recycling centres? Vince Sellars tagged an old water pump to find out. Normally, the steel from the pump would be separated and recycled in Sheffield, Sellars’s home city. In this case, the tag travelled to Boston, about 130 kilometres away. Perhaps it went with the pump’s plastic parts to a recycling facility in the town.

Tag 991

Winner: Mark Norman                

Item: soft-drink can                

Starting point: Chelmsford, Essex

End point: Tilbury, Essex

As an environmental manager at Anglia Ruskin University in Chelmsford, Mark Norman was keen to follow the fate of a soft-drink can collected from the university by waste contractor Green Recycling. After mechanical recovery in Maldon, Essex, the final tracker signal showed the can in Basildon. The company told Norman it was on its way to the docks at Tilbury, probably en route to metal dealers abroad.

Tag 968

Winner: Jeremy Branfoot                

Item: cardboard box                

Starting point: Ashdown House School, Forest Row, East Sussex

End point: Seaford, East Sussex

What becomes of all the old boxes picked up in recycling collections? Jeremy Branfoot, a teacher at Ashdown House School, tagged some of their cardboard waste as part of an eco-initiative at the school. After being collected by the council, the tagged cardboard travelled 50 kilometres to Seaford, where it was recycled to make fresh packaging.

Topics: Environment