News and Events
- Highly Cited: UCD researchers named amongst 2024’s most influential
- ESTEEM Graduate Programme
- Scientists’ next-generation space materials blast off for tests on ISS
- Competition! Celebrating John Stewart Bell’s Legacy
- Minister O’Donovan announces €26million for 40 research projects
- Engineering Class of 1958
- Professor Anding Zhu elected IEEE MTT-S President
- Bridges and Bytes – Launching the Student Voice on AI and Assessment
- European Research Council Funds Cutting-Edge Irish Research into Microplastics and Traumatic Brain Injury
- Professor Finola O'Kane appointed as a Senior Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks
- SBFE research fellow Xiaohui Lin receives the MSCA DOROTHY COFUND award
- Upskill with UCD’s engineering micro-credentials
- Minister O’Donovan announces funding boost for early career researchers
- Recent Lab visit by UCD Engineering & Architecture to Sheffield University Diamond Centre
- UCD Stormwater Runoff Research featured in Nicola Haines Team
- Madeleine Lowery among UCD Researchers recognised in SFI Frontiers for the Future Awards
- UCD’s LaNua Medical Wins Big Ideas Award at Enterprise Ireland’s Start-Up Day 2024
- Robotics Competition
- Congratulations to All the Winners of this years NovaUCD Awards
- Irish National Doctoral Research Cohort on Floating Offshore Wind Dynamic Cables is formed
- UCD and Northeastern University extend and deepen long-standing partnership with five collaborative research projects
- EPA announces €14.3M in new research funding
- Arup Scholarship Awards 2024
- UCD names new Vice-President for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
- Project promoting safe staffing in the healthcare system wins UCD Research Impact Competition
- VOICE Project Launches to Shape Tomorrow's Sustainability
- Archives
- 2023 News Archive
- 2022 News Archive
- 2021 News Archive
- 2020 News Archive
- Professor Da-Wen Sun Publishes Paper in Internationally Most Prestigious Journal (Impact Factor: 42.846)
- Assistant Professor Samantha Martin-McAuliffe new editor-in-chief of Architectural Histories.
- The Irish Laboratory Awards 2020
- Major development for Irish space sector as UCD launches Space Centre
- Introducing the winner of the Irish Research Council Impact Award
- University College Dublin Spin-Out Shortlisted for Irish Times Innovation Awards 2020
- UCD team wins prestigious ESB Inter-Colleges Challenge 2020
- University College Dublin Spin-out Wins Global Chemical Engineering Award
- UCD researchers named among world’s most influential
- Further Government Supported Places Announced
- Government Supported Places Announced
- NovoGrid Pilot Project Saves Over 300,000 kWh of Renewable Energy at Wexford Wind Farm
- Fourteen UCD research projects secure €10.2 million funding through SFI Frontiers for the Future Programme
- The Just Transition
- Nasrine Seraji joins UCD's School of APEP
- Two University College Dublin Spin-out Companies Shortlisted for the 2020 IChemE Global Awards
- Joyst Unveils a New Style of MIDI Music Controller and Launches a Kickstarter Campaign
- Celebrating this year's Women’s Economic Forum Award Winners
- Eight UCD projects awarded €1.5m to help respond to COVID-19 pandemic
- Revised Government public health guidelines impact on campus activities
- University College Dublin Spin-out Develops New Method to Generate Ozone Nanobubbles
- AERAP Virtual Conference
- Conferring Ceremony 2020
- Important information for incoming or continuing students of the UCD College of Engineering and Architecture
- Empowering the Full Potential of Image Data
- Digital Animation for Educators
- Eco-Health: Ecosystem Benefits of Greenspace for Health
- UCD First Year Engineering Students win the Grand Finals of the Engineers Without Borders-UK Engineering for People Design Challenge
- Intel’s Colm Farrell named as Adjunct Professor at UCD
- UCD Engineers Receive 2019 NovaUCD Innovation Awards
- PlasmaBound Seals €1.1 million Investment Round
- UCD Formula Student Wins the 2020 NovaUCD Student Enterprise Competition
- Fulbright Irish Awards: Nine UCD scholars selected for coveted transatlantic prize
- Two New COVID-19 Research and Innovation Projects at University College Dublin Receive Science Foundation Ireland Funding
- Eleven Early Stage Ventures Commence NovaUCD’s 2020 Start-up Programme for Student Entrepreneurs
- UCD Staff reflect on COVID-19’s Transformation of Education
- A Milestone — UCD Professor's H-Index (Web of Science) Reaches 100
- Airflow video shows how easily coronavirus can be spread by coughing
- UCD researcher co-leads €4.5m project to use cold plasma to treat Orthopaedic infection
- UCD Researchers Discover New Method to Generate Substantial Volumes of Nanobubbles in Water
- UCD volunteers use 3D printing to produce PPE for front-line COVID-19 medical staff
- UCD engineer leads Irish efforts in global race to build ventilators
- Minor Harbours of Ireland
- Forbes ‘30 under 30 Europe' recognises two UCD graduates
- UCD-based Inventors Help Create Ingenious Solutions to Everyday Problems for Extraordinary People on Big Life Fix
- Arup UCD Engineering scholarships 2019
- Yvonne Farrell and Shelley McNamara Receive the 2020 Pritzker Architecture Prize
- President Higgins honours SFI President of Ireland Future Research Leaders
- UCD heat-resistant coating to allow ESA’s Solar Orbiter to get up close and personal with the Sun
- Intel and UCD Renew Collaboration on Talent, Research and Education
- Bottles or Cans – An Energy Analysis of Recycling that Prompts More Questions than Answers
- 2019 News Archive
- 2018 News Archive
- 2017 News Archive
- 2016 News Archive
- Building the State
- A Centenary Celebration
Bottles or Cans – An Energy Analysis of Recycling that Prompts More Questions than Answers
Monday, 18 December, 2023
The selection of beer these days is astonishing, but recently I was faced with a new choice: the same beer in either a bottle or a can. I wondered about the energy cost of transporting a bulky product like beer across the globe, and what contribution the beer’s packaging made to this cost? And then there is the question of how much energy it takes to manufacture this packaging in the first place? And then the further question of happens to this packaging after the beer has been consumed?
These and other questions prompted a recent UCD study into the energy cost of household recycling. Masters student, Kevin Brennan, under my own supervision, set out to analyse what happens to a typical household Mixed Dry Recycling (MDR) ‘green’ bin, in particular looking at the energy cost of processing this waste. There is a glib assumption that once something has been put into the green bin it has been ‘recycled’, but the reality is far more complicated.
The RPS and the EPA reported on the total amount of waste produced and managed in Ireland in the year 2018 and, on average, an Irish family placed over 250 kilograms of waste into mixed dry recycling (MDR) bins that year. Assuming that bins are collected roughly every fortnight, it may be assumed that the contents of the average Irish recycling bin weighs about 15 kilograms, and this figure was used as a standard throughout the study. The breakdown of waste in a typical MDR bin is summarised in Figure 1, below.
Figure 1 – Breakdown of waste in an MDR ‘green’ bin, with the four largest components indicated on the pie-chart on the left.
So what is the cost of recycling this waste? The difficulty in answering this question is that ‘cost’ can be viewed in very different ways. For example, you could look at the monetary cost of getting a contractor to legally recycle and dispose of the constituents of the bin. Alternatively, given that monetary cost is transient and essentially based on what society deems valuable at the time (through taxes and incentives), the more fundamental energy cost of dealing with the waste could be assessed. Another options, given that items such as plastics do not biodegrade, you could try and look at the long-term environmental cost.
These three costs are obviously intertwined. For example, in an effort to reduce the environmental impact you might reprocess plastic at a high energy and monetary cost. Or you could put levies on the production of virgin plastic and thus shift the emphasis onto energy-intensive recycling. Given that environmental cost is so difficult to quantify, and monetary cost transient, the focus in this study was on the energy cost of recycling.
Table 1 – Energy to produce (‘embodied energy’) and energy to recycle selected materials in MDR bins.
The above table shows the energy to produce (right column) and recycle (left column) different materials found in MDR bins. PET, PP and PE represent the three main types of plastic, which are mostly used for food and beverage packaging. These figures were combined with representative transport costs to get the total energy costs. They were also adjusted to account for the volume of food/drink packaged rather than just their mass. For example, if you were comparing the quantity of energy to recycle a fizzy drinks container – PET vs aluminium – you would compare, not the mass of that material found in the bin, but the energy cost per volume of fluid packaged. Some materials are denser than others, and some, such as aluminium, can form strong containers with thin walls, so normalisation on these grounds had to be carried out.
Figure 2 – The energy to recycle a single MDR bin could power a car from Dublin to Cork.
Although it was a challenge to get relevant information from recycling companies and track the circuitous recycling routes that items take, an estimate of the energy to recycle an MDR bin was found to be 293 MJ per bin. To put this into context, this is the same energy consumed in driving a car from Dublin to Cork. It is also important to point out that this figure is based on a complete recycling of the entire waste in the bin. It should be noted that in practice, due to the prohibitive monetary cost of recycling certain materials and the contamination of others, full recycling of MDR bin contents does not take place, but the figure is still informative.
Focus on Plastics
There was a particular focus on plastic waste. The use of plastics for trivial, short-life-span activities have made them a growing societal concern. Plastic makes up around 20% of a typical MDR bin but not all of this is recycled. Contamination is a major issue that renders many batches unusable, but even for clean, suitable plastics, processes such as hydrolysis – which chemically break the plastic down its core components before rebuilding it to the previous product – only produce a new bottle for every two recycled.
Further to this, the monetary cost of this process, without subsidy, makes it uncompetitive against the production of virgin plastic. This points to a wider problem; from an environmental perspective, energy is priced low. The low cost of producing and shipping virgin plastic, as well as the low cost of the fossil fuels that these plastics are made from in the first place, incentivises the production of ever more plastic over recycling what we already have or seeking a sustainable alternative. And there is one further issue: aesthetics. Consumers ‘prefer’ the look of virgin plastic to the recycled alternative, even though the latter performs every bit as well.
In practice, most recycling facilities break plastics down mechanically into flakes. These flakes are then used to make duvets, boxes, pallets, jumpers and other similar products. The downside of this is that secondary plastic does not replace primary production meaning there is still a high use of natural resources and a heavy environmental impact. It does, however, reduce the amount of plastic going straight to landfill.
Special Case – Aluminium
Aluminium is a uniquely recyclable product as it can be reused indefinitely with no sacrifice of quantity or quality. Interestingly about three quarters of all aluminium ever produced is still in circulation. As shown in table 1, the embodied energy of aluminium is high (over twice that of most plastics) due the high energy required to remove the metal from its ore in the first place, but the ‘energy to recycle’ is less than 10% of this original energy cost.
Aluminium is a uniquely recyclable material
Aluminium is used for many applications but in MDR bins it is primarily used as a container for drinks. And this brings us nicely back to question posed at the start; which is a better: bottles or cans? Fortunately for beer lovers, due to modern canning processes, there is no compromise to taste or freshness. In other words, ‘tinnies’ no longer taste ‘tinny’. But what of the energy cost?
Currently about one third of aluminium is recycled with the rest coming from virgin stock, so an average drinks can weighing 15g requires 2.3 MJ to be produced. The energy-per-mass cost of glass is around a fifth of that for aluminium, but the weight of glass in a bottle vastly exceeds that of an aluminium can, resulting in an energy cost per bottle of 7MJ.
But what about transport? Beer is shipped from every corner of the world and the two beers I was looking at were from Colorado. The transport costs of the container alone from the US works out at 1.4MJ for the can and a staggering 18MJ for the bottle. So the total energy cost of getting those containers on the shelf in Dublin was 3.7MJ for the can and 25MJ for the bottle, a huge difference. Given that the cost of the beer is the same in each case, it is clear that aluminium cans are a better and less wasteful option than glass bottles. They are also completely recyclable so no landfill is required.
However, broader questions on green waste recycling are not so easy to answer. In truth, the word ‘recycle’ means very different things for paper, plastic and aluminium, and the interconnected nature of monetary cost, energy cost and environmental cost are not well understood by the general public. Then there is the completely non-linear issue of ‘contamination’, to which Brennan adds yet another complicating point.
“The narrative I came across a lot, and is something that people need to hear, is that if you are not sure whether something is recyclable, just throw it away. We have this notion that stuff in black bins is bad and in green bins is good, which is absurd given that you incur an energy cost of processing materials for recycling and if they don't get recycled into usable stock, that energy is wasted.”
It is obvious that we need to better understand and better communicate these ideas if we are to ‘recycle’ conscientiously as most people genuinely wish to do.