During this Digital Deposit Return Scheme (DRS) pilot, we engaged 50 households in Greasby – a large village on the Wirral Peninsula, Merseyside, England.
Each household received two Polytagged items – a bottle of Palmolive, with a code printed on the substrate, and an aluminium can of Lynx deodorant with the code on a sticker*.
Each item had a unique, random code that identified it individually, like a fingerprint. The participants were asked to scan these unique codes with Polytag’s app on their mobile device, once they had consumed the products.
*Note: Through our partnerships with printing providers, we have since found ways to laser etch our codes on aluminium cans at line speeds.
Over a six week period in Q4 2019, a Polytag team would collect the recyclables from the participant households, including the items with Polytag’s codes.
The materials were then processed and recycled at Polytag’s facility in Deeside. This included a second scan of the Polytagged items, marking them as recycled in our system.
The incentive for the households to participate was a donation to a local school.
The trial was a resounding success, with over 91% of the products scanned by participants being recycled by our team at Deeside.
The three main reasons that participants felt engaged with the pilot were:
“After seeing the Blue Planet series, as a family we really started to consider what happens to our packaging after use. The Polytag app helped us to better understand how to recycle more efficiently and how we could all contribute to a healthier environment.”
“We have always enjoyed technology as a family, the Polytag app gave clear and simple instruction on how to recycle each product and having the ability to follow our recycling and reward local schools and community projects is fantastic – the opportunity to unlock and increase recycling rates is certainly a great move, as users of these products we hold that key!”
“There’s always a misconception that the importance of recycling is a generational matter, using an app to better understand how to recycle was initially alien to us. However, it was easy and enjoyable. The collection was prompt and additional funds being made available to local schools for our participation is great.”