What rubbish do milk powder and bread belong to? China has tried the garbage sorting policy in major cities, but many people don't know how to sort some junk food. I have summarized the contents of what rubbish milk powder and bread belong to here. Let's have a look!
What rubbish do milk powder and bread belong to? What kind of garbage does milk powder belong to?
Judging from the classification methods of municipal solid waste abroad, it is generally classified according to the composition and output of garbage, combined with the resource utilization and treatment methods of local garbage. For example, Germany is generally divided into paper, glass, metal and plastic; Australia is generally divided into compostable garbage, recyclable garbage and non-recyclable garbage; Japan is generally divided into plastic bottles, recyclable plastics, other plastics, resource garbage, large garbage, combustible garbage, nonflammable garbage and harmful waste.
Milk powder belongs to wet garbage.
Other (dry garbage)
Other garbage (called dry garbage in Shanghai) includes brick and tile ceramics, muck, toilet waste paper, paper towels and other wastes that are difficult to recycle, fruit shells, dust, food bags (boxes) and so on. Sanitary landfill can effectively reduce the pollution of groundwater, surface water, soil and air.
Big bones are classified as "other garbage" because they are "hard to corrode". Corn kernels, nut shells, fruit kernels and chicken bones are all kitchen garbage.
Toilet paper: Toilet paper and toilet paper are soluble in water, not recyclable "paper", and there are similar cigarette cases.
Bagging of kitchen waste: Ordinary plastic bags, even though degradable, are far more difficult to corrode than kitchen waste. In addition, plastic bags themselves are recyclable garbage. The correct way is to dump the kitchen waste into the trash can and throw the plastic bag into the "recyclable garbage" bucket.
Shell: In garbage classification, the logo of "shell melon skin" is peanut shell, which really belongs to kitchen garbage. Waste cooking oil left at home is also classified as "kitchen garbage".
Dust: In the classification of garbage, dust belongs to "other garbage" and litter belongs to "kitchen garbage", including flowers that have failed at home.
What rubbish do milk powder and bread belong to? 2 What kind of rubbish does bread belong to?
Bread belongs to wet garbage. Wet garbage: Wet garbage is not wet garbage, but perishable garbage. Such as leftovers, expired food, melon seeds, flowers and green plants.
Dry garbage refers to other garbage, and refers to other domestic garbage except recyclable, harmful waste and wet garbage.
Household food waste
Wet garbage is also called kitchen waste, that is, perishable garbage, which refers to the domestic garbage of perishable substances such as kitchen waste, leftovers, expired food, melons, skins and stones, flowers and green plants, and Chinese medicine residues.
Wet garbage is the garbage generated by residents' daily life, food processing, catering service, unit catering and other activities, including abandoned leaves, leftovers, peels, eggshells, tea dregs, bones and so on. Its main sources are family kitchens, restaurants, restaurants, canteens, markets and other industries related to food processing.
Food waste: cereals and their processed foods (rice, rice, flour, bread and beans), meat and eggs and their processed foods (chicken, duck, pig, cow, mutton, eggs, animal offal, bacon, lunch meat and eggshells), aquatic products and their processed foods (fish, fish scales, shrimp shells and squid) and vegetables (green leafy vegetables).
Leftovers: hot pot soup base (drained solid waste), fish bones, broken bones, tea residue, coffee residue, etc.
Expired food: cakes, sweets, air-dried food (dried meat, red dates, Chinese herbal medicines), powdered food (brewed drinks, flour), pet feed, etc.
Watermelon skin and stone: pulp (coconut meat), peel (watermelon skin, orange skin, apple skin), fruit stem branch (grape branch), fruit (watermelon seed) and so on.
Flower plants: domestic green plants, flowers, petals, branches and leaves, etc.