Walk behind any high street in Britain — Manchester’s Northern Quarter, Liverpool’s Bold Street, Leeds’ Victoria Quarter, any of them — and you’ll find the same scene. Overflowing trade bins. Collapsed cardboard stacked against fire exits. Bottle skips full to the brim days before the next collection. It’s the part of running a business that nobody puts on Instagram.
The UK generates approximately 37 million tonnes of commercial and industrial waste every year. Of that, a significant proportion comes from the businesses that make up the backbone of the economy — restaurants, pubs, hotels, retail shops, distribution centres, offices, healthcare facilities, and manufacturing operations. Every one of them produces waste, and every one of them pays to have it removed.
What most don’t realise is how much of that cost is avoidable — and how straightforward the equipment solutions are that could reduce it. Companies like Gradeall International, a Northern Ireland-based manufacturer that builds balers, compactors, glass crushers, and waste handling equipment for commercial and industrial operations across the UK and over 20 countries worldwide, have been making this case for years. But the message is only just starting to land, partly because most business owners have never set foot inside a waste equipment showroom and partly because the waste industry itself has done a poor job of explaining the options.
The Cardboard Mountain
Start with cardboard, because almost every business in the country deals with it. A mid-size restaurant receives deliveries daily — food supplies, cleaning products, packaging, dry goods. A retail shop unpacking stock generates bin bags full of corrugated board every week. A distribution centre or warehouse produces volumes that can fill a skip in hours.
Most businesses handle this by breaking boxes down by hand, stuffing them into trade waste bins, and paying their waste carrier to collect by volume or by lift. The problem is that loose cardboard is almost entirely air. A wheelie bin full of flattened cardboard contains a fraction of the material weight that the same bin could hold if the cardboard were compressed.
A vertical baler like the G-eco 50S changes that equation completely. The machine compresses loose cardboard into dense bales — typically reducing volume by 75% to 90%. For a business generating significant cardboard waste, that means fewer bin lifts, fewer collections, and a measurably lower waste bill. In many cases, the baled cardboard itself has resale value: clean, dense cardboard bales are a tradeable commodity that recycling merchants will collect and pay for, turning a cost line into a modest revenue stream.
The G-eco 50S is designed for the kind of operation where space is tight and staff time is limited — exactly the conditions you find behind a restaurant kitchen, in a retail stockroom, or in a hotel loading bay. It doesn’t require specialist training or a dedicated operator. Staff feed cardboard in, the machine compresses it, and when the bale is complete, it’s strapped, ejected, and ready for collection.
For businesses across Greater Manchester and the North West — where commercial rents mean every square metre of back-of-house space matters — the footprint of the machine is as important as its processing capacity. A vertical baler tucked into a corner of a loading area does the same job that previously required a skip taking up half the yard.
The Glass Problem Nobody Mentions
If cardboard is the visible waste problem, glass is the audible one. Anyone who’s lived near a pub, bar, or restaurant knows the sound — the early morning bottle collection, crates of empties crashing into a glass skip, the recycling lorry emptying the lot at an hour that tests neighbourhood goodwill.
The UK’s hospitality sector gets through staggering volumes of glass. A busy city centre pub can generate hundreds of bottles per night — beer, wine, spirits, mixers. Multiply that across every pub, bar, restaurant, hotel, and events venue in a city like Manchester, and the tonnage is enormous.
Most hospitality businesses handle glass waste the same way they’ve always done: collect empties in crates or bins, stack them in a yard or cellar, and wait for collection. The glass goes out whole, taking up maximum space, at maximum collection cost.
A large glass crusher offers a fundamentally different approach. The machine crushes whole bottles into cullet — granulated glass fragments that occupy a fraction of the original volume. A bottle that takes up 330ml of space as a whole vessel takes up a fraction of that as crushed glass. For a venue generating significant glass waste, the volume reduction translates directly into fewer collections and lower waste management costs.
The crushed glass itself is a recyclable commodity. Clean cullet is used in glass manufacturing, road surfacing aggregate, water filtration media, and construction applications. Unlike whole bottles — which need sorting by colour and type before they can be recycled — crushed glass from a single-venue crusher is typically clean and consistent enough for direct recycling.
For Manchester’s hospitality sector — which spans everything from the bars on Deansgate and Peter Street to the restaurants in Ancoats and Chorlton, from the hotels around Piccadilly to the event venues at Manchester Central — glass waste management is an ongoing operational cost that most venues accept as fixed. It doesn’t have to be.
Why Most Businesses Don’t Know About This
There’s a knowledge gap in the UK’s commercial waste sector that benefits nobody except the waste carriers charging by volume. Most small and medium-sized businesses have never been presented with equipment options for managing their own waste on-site. They deal with a waste carrier, they pay the invoices, and they assume that’s the only model available.
The waste carriers themselves have limited incentive to tell customers about volume-reduction equipment. A pub that installs a glass crusher needs fewer collections. A restaurant that starts baling its cardboard needs fewer bin lifts. Both outcomes reduce the carrier’s revenue from that customer.
This isn’t a conspiracy — it’s just misaligned incentives. The waste carrier’s business model is built on collection frequency and volume. The customer’s interest lies in reducing both. Equipment manufacturers like Gradeall sit in between, making machines that shift the economics in the customer’s favour, but often struggling to reach the business owners who’d benefit most because those owners aren’t looking for waste equipment — they’re looking for ways to cut costs, and they don’t realise the waste bill is where the opportunity sits.
The Numbers That Should Change Minds
Consider a practical example. A hospitality venue in central Manchester paying for three trade waste collections per week at, say, £35 per lift is spending over £5,400 a year on waste removal alone. If a baler or crusher reduces collection frequency by two-thirds, the annual saving exceeds £3,600. Over three years, that’s nearly £11,000 — comfortably more than the cost of the equipment.
For larger operations — a hotel group, a restaurant chain, a distribution centre — the numbers scale proportionally. A business receiving daily waste collections across multiple streams might be spending £15,000 to £25,000 annually on waste management. Equipment that reduces volume by 75% or more across cardboard, plastics, and glass can cut that figure dramatically, with payback periods measured in months rather than years.
The environmental argument runs parallel. The UK’s target of reaching net zero by 2050 requires businesses to reduce waste volumes, increase recycling rates, and minimise the transport miles associated with waste collection. Every collection truck that doesn’t need to make a trip is diesel not burned, emissions not produced, and road space not occupied. On-site processing equipment contributes to all three.
What This Means for Northern Businesses
The North West has particular characteristics that make on-site waste processing equipment especially relevant. Commercial property costs in Manchester, Liverpool, and the surrounding towns mean storage space for waste is expensive. Collection logistics in congested city centres are slow and costly. The region’s hospitality and retail sectors generate substantial waste volumes across thousands of individual premises.
Gradeall International, manufacturing from Dungannon in Northern Ireland, builds equipment specifically designed for these conditions — compact vertical balers for businesses with limited back-of-house space, glass crushers for high-volume hospitality venues, horizontal balers for larger warehouse and distribution operations, waste compactors for multi-stream commercial facilities, and tyre processing equipment including the MK2 and MK3 tyre balers, sidewall cutters for passenger and commercial tyres, and specialist OTR tyre cutting equipment for the heavy vehicle and mining sectors.
The company’s range reflects the reality that waste management isn’t a single problem — it’s a collection of material-specific challenges, each requiring the right equipment matched to the right operation. For UK businesses still handling waste the way they did a decade ago, the question isn’t whether better options exist. It’s how long they’re willing to keep paying for air.










































































