The Chronicle

Coles and Woolies’ recycling proposal

- ELI GREEN

WOOLWORTHS and Coles will take on responsibi­lity for more than 12,000 tonnes of stockpiled soft plastic that is potentiall­y a threat to the environmen­t and human health.

The major supermarke­ts offered to take control of the plastics from failed recycling program REDcycle last week to “provide safe storage of the material while recycling solutions are explored”.

The now insolvent organisati­on accepted the offer on Sunday.

“We’re pleased this agreement will provide greater certainty that REDcycle’s stockpiles will be responsibl­y managed for the best possible environmen­tal outcome,” a Coles and Woolworths a spokespers­on said in a joint statement.

The thousands of tonnes of plastic are kept in 32 stockpiles across NSW, Victoria and South Australia.

With a “limited” soft plastic recycling capacity in Australia and the potential that some material will no longer be suitable for recycling, it’s possible parts of the stockpile could go to landfill.

“To date, the supermarke­ts have not been given access to the stockpiled material. They will need to assess whether any of the soft plastic has degraded to an extent where it is no longer suitable for reprocessi­ng,” a spokespers­on for both companies said last week.

“Coles and Woolworths will work to recycle as much of the material they are given as possible.”

The offer does not include a monetary offer for the plastics and is not an attempt to purchase the failed program by Woolworths or Coles.

The pair of retail giants will move to take control of the mountains of plastic after the company winds up on Monday as ordered by the NSW Supreme Court.

Teams from Coles and Woolworths will work with REDcycle employees and a court appointed administra­tor on a stockpile remediatio­n and management plan.

“We will be commencing work this week to address the current stockpile storage issues and conducting inspection­s of the REDcycle material over the coming weeks,” the supermarke­ts’ spokespers­on said on Monday.

REDcycle’s parent company RG Programs and Services was declared insolvent on Monday after it failed to pay storage fees on the thousands of tonnes of plastic.

Benjamin Carson of Farnsworth Carson has been appointed as liquidator to take control of the business, with creditors to have to fight for what they are owed by the company, including one that said they weren’t paid to store the plastic.

Coles and Woolworth say they paid $20 million to the company over a decade as partners in the scheme.

The company’s collapse will not prevent Coles and Woolworths from enacting their rescue plan for the plastic.

Both supermarke­ts will contribute to a “multimilli­ondollar” fund to store and manage the stockpiled material.

 ?? ?? RECYCLING: Woolworths and Coles will contribute to a ‘multimilli­on-dollar’ fund to store and manage stockpiled soft plastics.
RECYCLING: Woolworths and Coles will contribute to a ‘multimilli­on-dollar’ fund to store and manage stockpiled soft plastics.

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