Truro News

Kemptown facility overflowin­g with plastic bags

- BY HARRY SULLIVAN hsullivan@trurodaily.com

A growing stockpile of plastic grocery bags at the municipal Materials Recovery Facility (MRF) in Kemptown has officials scrambling to find a way to dispose of them.

“The warehouse is now at capacity and an interim solution must be found now,” a staff report to council says.

There are currently 13 truckloads of plastic bags being stored at the facility “with no market for this product in the foreseeabl­e future,” the report says.

And the bags are accumulati­ng at about two truckloads per month, said MRF manager Jann Mcfarlane.

“The majority of it would be grocery bags,” she said, while adding that other recyclable items are also stored in the warehouse and available space is quickly being used up.

Nonetheles­s, Mcfarlane stressed that residents should continue recycling their plastics.

“I think it’s very important that we don’t change the message (of recycling) because markets can change quickly,” said. “We still want to encourage residents to place their grocery bags in recycling.”

People are also strongly encouraged to use reusable bags when shopping.

“That is definitely the numberone way, reduce first.” Until recently, the Municipali­ty of Colchester had been selling its plastics as a recyclable product to China. Last year Chinese manufactur­ers imported 7.3 million tonnes of the waste plastics from developed countries in North America, the U.K., the EU and Japan. In July, however, the Chinese government announced a ban on imports of 24 categories of recyclable­s and solid waste, including waste plastics, by the end of this year.

That has left the municipali­ty with no market for material, which under provincial regulation­s cannot be landfilled.

Other municipal units are facing the same problem and, last month, the Colchester Solid Waste Department invited peers from other jurisdicti­ons and representa­tives from the Nova Scotia Department of Environmen­t (DOE) to the Kemptown facility to discuss the situation.

“The concerns were the same for all municipali­ties,” the report said. “Recycling facilities were becoming overloaded with product that suddenly had no home.”

Council has directed staff to send a letter to the DOE requesting assistance in locating alternativ­e markets as well as implementi­ng a temporary lift of the ban on the landfillin­g of plastics.

At this point, however, the ban remains in place, said department spokespers­on Heather Fairbairn.

“The Department is aware of the market challenges created by Chinese import restrictio­ns and we are reviewing the matter,” she said.

As of Thursday, the only disposal request the department had received was from the Halifax Regional Municipali­ty, “…and we will be making a decision on that early in the new year,” Fairbairn said.

“The department would consider requests from other approval holders if they are received.”

 ?? HARRY SULLIVAN/TRURO DAILY NEWS ?? A storage warehouse at the Materials Recovery Facility in Kemptown is quickly overfillin­g with recyclable plastic bags ever since the Chinese government banned the import of such products last summer. However, Jann Mcfarlane, manager of the Materials...
HARRY SULLIVAN/TRURO DAILY NEWS A storage warehouse at the Materials Recovery Facility in Kemptown is quickly overfillin­g with recyclable plastic bags ever since the Chinese government banned the import of such products last summer. However, Jann Mcfarlane, manager of the Materials...

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