De gauche à droite, Hannah, Matilda Mascal Sanford et de l'Inde Matthews , tous de baignoire, prendre le petit déjeuner le jour 3 pendant le Glastonbury Festival de musique.
3744 x 5616 px | 31,7 x 47,5 cm | 12,5 x 18,7 inches | 300dpi
Date de la prise de vue:
27 juin 2015
Lieu:
Glastonbury, Pilton, Somerset, England, United Kingdom
Informations supplémentaires:
The recycling Centre in Glastonbury. It costs £780, 000 to dispose and recycle the waste at the Glastonbury Festival.The Festival commits to continuing its policy of reducing the percentage of waste that goes to landfill, by placing controls on what is bought on site by staff, contractors, sponsors and traders and by emphasis on their responsibility not to bring items that will end in landfill. All cans, glass, paper, wood and organic waste are separated and recycled. There are 15, 000 bins around the site clearly identified for either wet or dry recyclable materials or non-recyclable rubbish. In 2014, half of all waste generated by the Festival was recycled. The goal for 2015 is 60%. In 2014 the Festival recycled 114 tonnes of composted organic waste, 400 tonnes of chipped wood, 23 tonnes of glass, 85 tonnes of cans and plastic bottles, 41 tonnes of cardboard, 162 tonnes of scrap metal, 11.2 tonnes of clothing, tents, sleeping bags, 0.264 tonnes of batteries, 3 tonnes of dense plastic. 0.25 tonnes plastic sheets. 983 tonnes of waste were recycled or diverted from landfill. 54 % of our waste was recycled.