Do your teams need waste management training?

With the Circular Economy Package’s targets becoming more ambitious and national recycling targets reaching higher than before, it’s increasingly important to ensure you’re equipped to make the right decisions about your business’s recycling and waste management processes.

Waste management training, whilst upskilling the work force, can help to support your decision-making and can encourage your organisation’s buy-in of new, more efficient recycling and waste management practices.

But who is it that needs the training? Is it just the team directly responsible for waste management at your organisation, or is it the wider workforce? Everyone has a part to play in reducing waste and recycling more.

And what role does your waste management partner play in all of this? Should they be working with you around education and training for waste management? If so, what have they done in their own organisation to make sure they are passing on best-in-class advice and techniques?

At DS Smith, our goals are to delight our customers and to lead the way in sustainability.

We take education and training around recycling and waste management seriously. Our teams are accredited members of the CIWM, the leading professional body for the waste management industry – and we win awards for the work we’ve done for our customers.

Is waste management training right for you?

If you’re looking at your waste management and wondering if training is the right thing for you – we think you should have the discussion with your service provider first. They should be your source of expertise on how to waste less and recycle more.

Get more from your waste management

The first goal of any recycling and waste management system is legal compliance. Over the years, legislation has increasingly governed how organisations deal with their waste arisings. But achieving legal compliance should be seen as the minimum standard, not the goal.

There is an often-held view that more sustainable waste management practices come at a financial cost. But this doesn’t need to be the case, and very often the reverse is true. Best practice recycling and waste management can improve efficiency and benefit your bottom line as well as the environment.

So here are 5 ways in which you can improve your approach to recycling and waste management.

1. Know what materials you’re producing

Conduct an audit of your estate with your waste management partner. They should advise you on areas where your recycling can be doing more for you – and whether there are any areas of your business that can be improved to prevent material loss.

Cardboard in your general waste? It can be recycled. Even the best-organised businesses are often surprised to find out how much recyclable material is still ending up in their waste bins.

Challenge your waste management partner to work with you to make sure that all material that can be recycled is recycled.

2. Demand transparency

You need to know the details of your waste management. Who collected it? When? How much did it weigh, and what was the end treatment process?

Your waste management and recycling partner should be able to give you accurate data on your arisings, tonnages, and transport. That will allow you to report on your successes and to compare your recycling rate month-on-month, so you know when you’re meeting your goals.

3. Are your bins really collecting waste?

If your bins are collected half-empty twice a week, or if recyclable materials are going into general waste, you’re losing out.

Make sure your waste management partner gives you the right sized bins for your waste – if your bins are too big, you are paying for fresh air to be collected. So if you have increased recycling collections, make sure there is a corresponding reduction in your general waste collections.

4. Set your objectives

You should know what materials you’re producing, and where your largest arisings come from. You should also know how many bins are being lifted – and what’s going into them.

Develop a new plan with your waste management partner. Make sure it’s efficient – reducing waste and maximising recycling. With less waste and well segregated, good quality recycling, you can benefit the bottom line with reduced costs and increased revenues.

Remember, though, that each site will have its own challenges. A one-size-fits-all strategy might be difficult to implement, so make sure you set SMART objectives that can be delivered on a site by site basis.

5. Engage your employees

From the boardroom to the shop floor, everyone in your organisation can make a difference to your recycling rate. Your waste management provider should support you with educational promotion to ensure that all of your employees know what best practice looks like.

Whether it’s welcome packs, posters, videos or training, your waste management partner should be able to tell you how to get your teams on board.

Do you need waste management training?

Whether you think your teams need waste management training, or you’re working with a provider who brings that expertise to the table, your recycling and waste management doesn’t stand still.

Find a service provider who understands your needs and works to solve your problems. Take a look at our recycling and waste management services today to see what we can do for you.

 

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