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Bristol City Council said around 50% of households do not recycle food waste, and a quarter of most black bin rubbish is food, which could be recycled. Around £700 of food is thrown away every ...
SA Waste Holdings (Pty) Ltd is a waste management company, based in Johannesburg, South Africa, in Gauteng Province. It was launched in 1990, and as of 2003 [update] had 626 staff members. [ 3 ] The company has clients in the retail, commercial, entertainment and gambling sectors. [ 4 ]
Collections of different types of household waste in Bristol comprise two categories of recyclable waste, food waste, garden waste, and non-recyclable waste. [7] There is also a range of recycling banks. There are currently two household recycling centres located at Avonmouth and St Philips. Plans for a third site in Hartcliffe were deferred in ...
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SITA (originally Société Industrielle de Transport Automobile) [1] is the main brand representing Suez's waste subsidiaries in Europe, North America, the Asia Pacific zone and Australia. Following the merger of the original Suez and Gaz de France in 2008, Suez Environnement (now Suez) became a listed group on the New York Stock Exchange ...
Durban was the first South African city to introduce a policy of free basic water in 1998. [63] After Thabo Mbeki became President of South Africa in 1999 and a cholera outbreak occurred in 2000, the African National Congress promised free basic water during a municipal election campaign in December 2000. In July 2001 free basic water became a ...
All landfills sites in South Africa are required by law to have a buffer zone between the active landfill and adjacent communities. [3] The Buffelsdraai buffer zone would be a minimum of 800 m wide and 787 ha in extent and would shield the neighbouring communities, namely Buffelsdraai and Osindisweni, from the impacts of the landfill. [3]
The 1957 Alexandra bus boycott was a protest undertaken against the Public Utility Transport Corporation by the people of Alexandra in Johannesburg, South Africa. It is generally recognised as being one of the few successful political campaigns of the Apartheid era, by writers and activists such as Anthony Sampson and Chief Albert Luthuli. [1] [2]