Milk bottles made in East Lancashire used as petrol bombs for police riot training (From Chorley Citizen)
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Milk bottles made in East Lancashire used as petrol bombs for police riot training
1:00pm Wednesday 20th February 2013 in East Lancashire
MD Jayne Shaw with some of the bottles that will be sent for police riot training
MILK bottles from East Lancashire are doing sterling work to educate the country’s riot squads – in the form of makeshift petrol bombs.
Around 50,000 pintas a year find their way from a factory in Simonstone to the Metropolitan Police’s specialist training centre in Gravesend, Kent.
For almost 30 years Seaway Services have been supplying printed milk bottles, and glassware, to the likes of the dairy and catering industries.
But bosses at the Blackburn Road firm admit their contract with the Met was one of their more unusual deals.
The force’s territorial support group, which saw action during the London riots, undergoes public disorder training at the Kent centre, one of the largest in Europe.
Steve Smith, who runs sess- ions at the centre, said: “We use milk bottles pretty much on a daily basis, creating petrol bombs to make riot training more realistic.
“We throw them around the site to train officers to react to real-life situations of that nature.
“We order 30,000 to 50,000 a year from Seaways and they provide a brilliant service.”
Recycled glass bottles form the main bulk of the contract, but plain glass bottles are also employed.
Jayne Shaw, Seaways’ managing director, said: “We’ve developed a great relationship with the centre over the years and it’s always fantastic for us to find new areas of demand for the traditional milk bottle, especially as super-markets continue to drive doorstep milk deliveries into decline.
“We always recycle scrap and waste products, but it’s great to find another use for bottles that benefits the community too.”
Comments(6)
Trap one
says...
1:45pm Wed 20 Feb 13
happycyclist wrote:so you think when you put them in your recycling bin they stay whole so that they can be used again as milk bottles?
Good news for manufacturing in E. Lancs, but anyone who orders new bottles just to smash up when people put millions of bottles into their recycling bins every week wants their head examining and sending on a money-management course. The three golden rules of sustainability: Reduce, reuse, recycle.
do you also think that once smashed they wont be any use for recycling... engage brain then post
clickhere
says...
1:50pm Wed 20 Feb 13
Otherwise, as this has been going on for years, they would be knee deep in broken glass by now.
happycyclist
says...
2:11pm Wed 20 Feb 13
Trap one wrote:What on earth are you on about? I'm saying that the police should be asking their local council to re-direct their glass recycling so that they can be used for police training before being taken away to be recycled. Save the local authority/police some money and not waste energy making glass bottles for the sole purpose of being smashed up. Save a few lorries travelling the length of the country, too. Jeez.
happycyclist wrote:so you think when you put them in your recycling bin they stay whole so that they can be used again as milk bottles?
Good news for manufacturing in E. Lancs, but anyone who orders new bottles just to smash up when people put millions of bottles into their recycling bins every week wants their head examining and sending on a money-management course. The three golden rules of sustainability: Reduce, reuse, recycle.
do you also think that once smashed they wont be any use for recycling... engage brain then post
happycyclist
says...
2:13pm Wed 20 Feb 13
clickhere wrote:Are you Trap One's dopey brother?
I'm sure that the broken bottles are swept up when the fire has gone out and they are put in the Mets recycling bin every fortnight.
Otherwise, as this has been going on for years, they would be knee deep in broken glass by now.
Major Tom
says...
5:02pm Wed 20 Feb 13
happycyclist says...
1:14pm Wed 20 Feb 13