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All questions and answers

BOFA takes the waste. But where do I hand in my used tyres? Can they have rims on them? What do I do with the half a can of paint that was left over?

We have collected the most frequently asked questions here. Click and see the answer.

At the bottom of the page, we have a direct email to BOFA's waste experts if you can't find the answer on the page.

Frequently asked questions

  • What's happening with Sanitary & Porcelain

    Collected at recycling centres and stored. The waste is then sent to Norrecco in Copenhagen, where it is reused in e.g. large concrete "Lego" bricks for cubicle partitioning.

  • What happens with Residual waste (households)

    Collected at households and then utilised in BOFAs energy plant and exchanged via RVV to district heating in Rønne.

  • What happens to Rest after sorting (large)

    Collected at recycling centres where it is checked and broken down before storage. It is then utilised in BOFAs energy plant and exchanged via RVV to district heating in Rønne.

  • What happens to Rest after sorting (small print)

    Collected at recycling centres and checked before storage. It is then utilised in BOFAs incinerator and is exchanged via RVV to district heating in Rønne.

  • What's happening with Rene tegl

    Collected at recycling centres and transported to a reception facility in Rønne, where they are broken down and sold as recyclable stabilisers (stable base for surfaces such as roads, paths and driveways).

  • What happens with pure heavily reinforced concrete

    Collected at recycling centres and transported to a receiving facility in Rønne, where it is broken down and sold as recycled stable (stable base for pavements such as roads, paths and driveways). However, it requires slightly heavier crushing equipment than normal reinforced concrete.

  • This is what happens with Ren normal reinforced concrete

    Collected at recycling centres and transported to a reception facility in Rønne, where it is broken down and sold as a recycling stable (stable base for surfaces such as roads, paths and driveways).

  • What happens with printer cartridges

    The fraction is covered by producer responsibility legislation. BOFA is therefore only responsible for the collection and short-term storage of the fraction. The producer, or company (Toner recycling) hired by the manufacturer is responsible for the reuse, recycling, recovery or disposal of the fraction after collection/storage.

  • What happens with Plastic films

    As of 1 October, the fraction is covered by producer responsibility legislation. BOFA is then only responsible for the collection and packaging of the fraction. The producer, or a company hired by the producer, is responsible for ensuring that the fraction is recycled or reused after collection/balling.

  • What happens to PCB-containing waste

    Collected via the scale in Rønne and deposited at BOFAs landfill in Rønne.

  • What happens with Security Shredding Paper

    Delivered to BOFA's recycling centre in Vestermarie, where it is shredded. It is then deposited via Danfibre to Skjern paper factorywhere it is recycled into new paper products.

  • What's happening with Pap

    As of 1 October 2025, the fraction is partially covered by producer responsibility legislation. BOFA will then only be partially responsible for the collection and baling of the fraction.

    The producer, or a company hired by the producer, is responsible for the recycling or reuse of the part of the waste fraction that contains packaging cardboard after collection/balling.

    The remaining part of the fraction is sold via Danfibre to Skjern paper factorywhere it is recycled into new cardboard products.

    OBS: Cardboard must be clean and dry, as wet or dirty cardboard, e.g. greasy pizza boxes, can ruin the recycling of clean and dry cardboard.