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Recycle Sites For Cleaned Pesticide Containers

 
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Institute of Agriculture and Natural Resources
CROPWATCH
 
Safety Education
 
Clyde Ogg, coordinator of the Pesticide Safety Education Program at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, helps load cleaned pesticide containers for transportation to a recycling facility.
 
Twenty sites are participating in the annual statewide pesticide container recycling program, now in its 26th year. Coordinated by Nebraska Extension’s Pesticide Safety Education Program, the recycling program encourages agricultural producers to bring in clean containers that will be hauled to a recycling facility and ground up. The material is then reused in industry-approved products such as drain tile, underground utility conduit, highway sign posts, and other products.
 
“Many agricultural producers in the region have a sense of responsibility,” said John Wilson, Nebraska Extension educator based in Tekamah. “They feel recycling containers is the right thing to do.”
 
All containers brought in for the pesticide container recycling should be intact, clean, and dry. Farmers are encouraged to leave any container crushing to the pros. Nebraska’s program accepts 1- and 2.5-gallon plastic agricultural pesticide or crop oil containers; in some locations, 15-, 30- or 55-gallon drums are accepted. Containers must be pressure- or triple-rinsed and drained. Rinsate must be returned to the spray tank and used appropriately. Container caps, labels, booklets, and slipcover plastic labels should be removed and thrown away. Glued-on paper labels may be left on. Any rejected containers remain the property of the vehicle driver.
 
Ron Perkins is executive director of the Ag Container Recycling Council (ACRC) that contracts with the hauler, and oversees the national pesticide container recycling effort for its 44 member states. Perkins said in 2016 Nebraska collected 61,680 pounds of containers to be recycled. Nationally last year, ACRC contractors collected a record 11.1 million pounds of containers.
 
The program is funded by crop protection product manufacturers and distributors through the Virginia-based ACRC. 
 
“We’re in a time when profits are down and budgets are cut,” said PSEP coordinator Clyde Ogg. “These are the times when it’s probably most important to collaborate with these types of successful voluntary programs.”
 
Information about the program is at http://pested.unl.edu/recycling, and information on cleaning containers is in the Nebraska Extension NebGuide, Rinsing Pesticide Containers.
 
Nebraska sites this year include six locations open May-August and seven sites open year-round, with the remainder open on specific dates or by appointment.
 

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