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Living in central Copenhagen, it often takes 2-3 attempts to give the bottles back. I'm going with my empty bottles to the supermarket and have to take them back home again or to another supermarket. In those cases I have to go shopping with the cans bag in my hands... The machines are usually full, out of order, or have a waiting line of hundreds of cans in front of me. It's quite rare that it just works without me calling anyone for help. And then it still takes quite a long time since the machines are absurdly slow. It's so annoying that I often see bottles in our shared trash containers. I wonder how many hours this guy took to return all those bottles! The machines in Germany usually work way faster and more reliably, and on top of the supermarket is forced to accept all bottles, so if the machine doesn't work, you can just take them to the cash register. I wonder why this video doesn't have a single line of critique and is also missing information on who is paying for which steps and what current problems people are working on.
This was my experience using the machines in Copenhagen as well. I think they're just overworked. It's not as much of an issue in the small towns that I've noticed. I wouldn't mind faster machines though. I saw a machine in Norway where you could empty the whole bag into a large opening and it would automatically sort and count the bottles and cans. Much easier than putting them in one by one.
@@augustuswarglewinkle6328 we also have the big machine in Denmark, but we wanted to show how the more normal system worked, so we went to the standard in the supermarket
We are still waiting for our deposit return scheme in the uk the last government has delayed this scheme three times the launch date is for 2027 however our new government may launch the scheme early