The best features in recycling

22 May 2012
Last updated: 13 hours ago
Linked in
Follow up on Twitter
Facebook
Subscribe to Resource magazine
 

Software reloaded

There’s no denying the waste industry has grown by leaps and bounds and there’s no denying software has helped its progress.
Will Simpson frees his mind to learn more about it

As with most industries, the last decade has seen the waste and recycling sector becoming increasingly reliant on, and indeed guided by, information technology. This doesn’t just include the Internet – now such a part of all our lives that day-to-day existence is almost inconceivable without it – but the software packages that have revolutionised the lot of the average recycling officer.

“During the last 10 years, IT has played a major part in the growth of the industry”, insists Richard Bowers, Managing Director of Isys Interactive Systems, a Derby-based firm that specialises in providing software packages to the recycling and waste sector. “In fact it’s unthinkable it could have experienced that growth without IT.” The software that has been developed by firms like Isys has enabled waste managers to see the big picture for the first time, develop more coherent waste strategies and meet the targets that have been imposed upon them. Software and service improvements have very much gone hand in hand.

This has been the case in both the public and private sector. The most significant piece of software that has transformed local authorities’ waste strategies is a package called the Waste and Resources Assessment Tool for the Environment (WRATE). Developed over a four-year period by Golder Associates for the Environment Agency, WRATE is a life cycle model that allows its users to take into account the waste management system in its entirety. For the first time, local councils and waste operators can factor not only the bins, but also the oil that made the bins.

WRATE Project Director David Hall takes up the story: “Once the Landfill Directive came in there was a clear need to have a means of allowing waste managers to understand the full environmental impact of their selected strategy. They decided to develop something that was a) a bit more up to date and b) contained more than just incinerators and landfill. The Environment Agency wanted a piece of software that contained all of those new advanced waste treatment technologies – pyrolysis, combined heat and power plants. You name it, they wanted it.”

WRATE has been sold to a dozen local authorities and over 30 environmental consultancies and Hall suggests it may yet play a role in reducing UK greenhouse gas emissions from waste. “We now have a way of working out what they are. By using WRATE it is very easy to change a waste management system from one that is a net greenhouse gas emitter to a net offsetter of greenhouse gases, replacing the use of oil, coal and gas with renewable energy.”

Recycling SoftwareNewcastle City Council was one of the local authorities that used Version 1.0 of WRATE, as Waste and Recycling Contracts and Strategy Manager Terry Harnan explains: “We acquired it to advise us on the outcome of our strategic environmental assessment. It was certainly very detailed and comprehensive and looked very good when you put in a report. It helped in the reports that you took to various committees – as an independent voice of analysis it worked well and carried them through the process.

“The downsides were that I found it a bit cumbersome, but then I am not the most PC-literate person in the world.”

For Hall, the most important thing about developing the actual software is making it relevant to those who are going to use it. “It’s important that people can understand it with a very small amount of training. It needs to be intuitive, it needs to be robust, it needs to not crash too often and if it does it needs to save all the data.”

At the same time as the Environment Agency was developing WRATE, WRAP was launching a piece of software called the Kerbside Analysis Tool (KAT), which, as the name suggests, allows users to scrutinise the variables within kerbside collections – different container types, levels of household participation and material capture. The first version of KAT emerged in 2004 and since then it has been an invaluable resource for local authorities looking to predict costs and improve their recycling service.

However, being an Excel spreadsheet tool, even KAT appears somewhat clunky compared to the sort of sophisticated packages that are increasingly coming onto the market. Qurius is a Lancashire-based firm that specialises in providing bespoke software packages, such as Enwis, which they describe as a ‘total solution for the waste management and recycling industry’.

Related Items

Imagine a home that is self sufficient in water, energy, sewage and perhaps even food. Sound too good to be true? Well, it’s not. And it can be made from recycled material to boot. Libby Peake gets her hands dirty learning how to build an earthship
Nearly 50 million waste tyres are generated every year in the UK, and they’ve been officially banned from landfill since 2006. Will Simpson follows the rubber trail to find out what happens to them
Light, versatile and airtight, the aerosol is a popular (and highly recyclable) package capable of storing and dispersing foam, paste, dry or wet spray, gel, cream or powder. Leonie Butler looks at what is being done to keep them in the recycling the loop
Most waste won’t kill you (in the short term), but there’s one type of waste that is far from a laughing matter: explosives – bombs and the accumulated detritus of mankind’s past conflicts. We speak to the experts to find out how to dispose of them safely.
Straight
view counter
view counter
Clean Britain Awards
view counter
UK Containers
view counter
view counter
CIWM Conferences
view counter
view counter