The Pacific Plastic Vortex

April 6th, 2010

The video cassettes we all use are made up of various oxides and plastics, none of which are bio-degradable, and none of which are recyclable in the traditional sense – we can’t readily turn them into drinking bottles – but we CAN recycle them for your own re-use (read more about that here). So, let’s have a look at what simply throwing your video tapes in the bin can do for our planet.

Every month, companies like CVA prevent over 3 tonnes of videotape ending up in a landfill. In a year, that amounts to 88,000 tapes, 36 tonnnes, or the equivalent of four whole articulated lorries. But it’s not enough. Nicholas Stern, in his recently published report on global climate change, estimates that waste in land fills accounts for 3% of the UK’s emissions – and that’s not factoring in the emissions spewed out in making these products. As an industry, we can make a greater contribution to cutting these levels of waste down.

“Re-using and recycling lead to less resources being required to produce new goods and a reduction in associated emissions … Climate change will have serious impacts on world output, on human life and on the environment … It is not an option to wait and see, we must act now.”

The Stern Review

If clogging up our land fills when there is no need wasn’t bad enough, throwing plastic in the bin could mean it ends up in our oceans.

According to Greenpeace, there is a large vortex of discarded plastic floating in the Pacific, that can swell to the size of Texas. That’s an area three times larger than the entire UK. And 80% of this plastic originates from the land. Of course, we’re not saying your discarded tapes are bobbing around the Pacific, but we’re only adding to the problem by not recycling them. The vortex is made up of debris from all around the globe, and it is trapping and choking wildlife, and killing birds like the albatross.

“We’ve seen photos of albatrosses who eat this plastic … Even though their stomachs are filled, they end up starving because there are no nutrients in there.”

The Greenpeace ship M.Y Esperanza has recently departed Hawaii as part of their Defending The Oceans campaign, where they had seen rubbish covering the coastline, but out at sea, they saw an even greater problem. “The danger to marine life has been known for decades, but the scale of the problem has not been realised. With plastic consumption rapidly increasing globally, plastic has become ubiquitous in the ocean.” They believe that marine pollution will only be stopped if we all take responsibility and adopt a zero waste policy which includes recycling.

To find out more about recycling your video tapes for re-use, please explore the rest of our site.



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Lean, Green & Mean

March 10th, 2010

Recycling your tapes is easy, great for the environment and even better for your budget. We’ll collect your tapes, sort them, recycle them and return them to you. You won’t need to worry about a thing.

And you can rest easy in the knowledge that by recycling your tapes for your own re-use, you are kicking your carbon footprint in to dust.

What’s more, you’ll be saving significant money in the meantime.

Recycle tape. It’s easy.



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Our New Live Customer Chat Is Ready

February 18th, 2010

We’ve just launched our new live customer service chat room. We hope to be able to answer any questions you may have.

So why not come and have a chat?



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New Prices

February 5th, 2010

The bad news is that we have to increase our prices by 3-4% with effect from 1st February 2010. The good news is that the savings from using evaluated tape still remain significant when compared to using new tape.

The second bit of good news is that we will be offering higher payments to suppliers of used videotape from February. This should increase the supply of used tape and enable us to keep up with the rising demand for stock evaluated tape.



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What Do You Call Yours?

January 13th, 2010

We’ve heard a plethora of different names for tape formats over the years, and we wondered what you called yours?

Are they the very formal Digital Betacam, or the more friendly DigiBeta? Or maybe you err somewhere in the middle, and adopt the moniker Digi Betacam. We find that most people are on first name terms, favouring to simply go with Digi.

What about Betacam SP? Do you use the TLA BSP, or the more succinct Beta? The same can be said for HDCam, though we find that what people mean by HD can vary a lot. HD can mean HDCam SR, or it can mean HDV to different people. That’s the one time we begin to insist on some continuity.

Whatever you call your tapes, we’re pretty sure it’s not Trevor.



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