DIFFERENTIATED REFUSE COLLECTION AND COMPOST
 
 
Differentiated refuse collection is the best way to preserve and maintain natural resources, for our benefit and that of future generations: recycling and re-using waste, from paper to plastic, contributes to restoring and preserving a “naturally” richer environment.
 
 
All our actions produce pollution and even the commonest ones, such as reading a newspaper or drinking orangeade, would be nothing if we did not consider that every day in the world millions of pages are printed, millions of plastic bottles or aluminium cans are produced, and millions of objects and pieces of furniture are assembled for our homes.
 
 
In other words, millions of trees are cut down, millions of litres of oil are used, millions of kilos of CO2 are released into the atmosphere: with differentiated waste collection, on the other hand, all these resources are saved.
 
 
Confident that the future can only go in this direction, SIRSA has created and continues to extend each year its range of articles for differentiated waste collection. From the ECHO containers to RUBIN, the new square bin on wheels and the mesh waste receptacle.
 
 
SIRSA’s offer in this sector does not end here: composting can recycle the household waste which daily fills up urban landfills with a considerable waste of precious energy.
 
 
Domestic composting is a process to obtain good soil from the organic waste from the domestic kitchen (fruit peel and pips, various foodstuffs, coffee and tea dregs etc....) and the garden (leaves, flowers, branches and all other refuse from plants...). Thanks to the Bio-Composter, by following only a few rules, very fertile soil can be obtained for practical use on your plants, helping the environment to dispose of refuse in a biologically healthy way that otherwise would be wasted. Compost is the result of the process of decomposition which takes place naturally on vegetal substances at the end of their vital process.
 
 
““One of the main causes of the ecological crisis lies in the fact that in the first place we do not know what we are doing and in the second place when we learn of the consequences of our actions we do not have a mechanism that induces us to change it.” (Vittorio Hösle).