Not that it makes much difference.
In the South of England one company has the contract with about 80% of local authorities for the disposal of glass from roadside bottle banks. If you watch, you will notice that this company routinely tips the contents of all three bins from a site into a single hopper on its wagon.
Why should this be so? Because there is currently too much �cullet� (broken glass for recycling) around. Despite glass being about the easiest and most cost-effective material to recycle the recycling companies deem it too expensive to sort and decontaminate broken bottles. There is simply too much debris amongst the glass (stoppers, corks, screwtops, labels, dog-ends, etc.) for them to be bothered. They only want clean cullet � such as offcuts from glaziers.
So where does all the glass that you so painstakingly sort end up? Where else but in land fill sites, of course. You will not read about this or find the statistics anywhere as, naturally, it is is open defiance of EC regulations. However, I have contacts in the glass industry and can assure you it is true.
It is just another example of the scandalous way that the gullible public are press ganged into complying with a scheme which, on the face of it makes pefect sense, but which is blatently abused when the material reaches the "wholesale" stage..