Bay of Plenty Times

Tauranga’s household waste woes

Each person creates 200kg of waste per year

- Luke Kirkness

As bins for a new citywide rubbish and recycling service start rolling out, figures show Tauranga creates more urban waste per capita than the New Zealand average.

Figures provided by the Tauranga City Council show each person creates 1053kg of urban waste — including both commercial and domestic waste — each year.

In 2016, on a per capita basis Kiwis sent 730.6kg of waste to landfill, making the country one of the highest generators of household waste in the OECD.

Tauranga City Council waste and sustainabi­lity manager Sam Fellows said each person generates 200kg of domestic waste each year.

The goal is to reduce that number to less than 100kg per capita within the next seven years.

“In simple terms: We expect the new service to halve the amount of waste the average household sends to landfill each year by 2028,” Fellows said.

Fellows thought the council’s new kerbside recycling service, which begins in July, would enable Tauranga to reach the target.

The service would make reducing household waste easier, more accessible, and more affordable, according to Envirohub.

Waste Watchers Limited director

Marty Hoffart said food and other organic waste could be the biggest problem but it was the easiest to fix.

Any organic waste domestic households put in their rubbish bins goes straight to landfill where it is buried and struggles to breakdown.

By pulling it out and composting it instead, Hoffart said there would be a massive reprieve on Tauranga’s carbon footprint.

“The key is if you have food scraps to put them in a compost bin or garden and with your organics [to keep them] on your property and have it composted,” he said.

“Fifty per cent of the average household’s landfill waste [is organics]. If you got that material out of it, you’d halve the landfill waste that comes from houses.”

The new council service includes a food scraps bin.

In a flyer sent out last week, Envirohub said 49 per cent of rubbish bin contents were compostabl­e, 33 per cent kitchen organics and 16 per cent garden organics.

And according to May-june 2018 waste audits, nearly 70 per cent of kerbside waste in Tauranga could be recycled or composted instead.

That’s the equivalent of throwing 360 tonnes — or about an A380 Airbus — of unnecessar­y waste of waste into landfill each week.

As part of the Long-term Plan 2018-28, Tauranga residents were asked whether a rates-funded kerbside collection should be introduced.

Sixty-six per cent of submission­s were in favour, and so the current opt-in system was scrapped for the new kerbside service starting on July 1.

What can go into the bins

The Tauranga City Council only recycles materials where there is a sustainabl­e end market, Fellows said, which is only plastics 1 and 2.

However, from July, Tauranga residents would be able to recycle number 5 plastics as well as 1 and 2.

Plastics 3, 4, 6, and 7 would not be recyclable because their end market is not sustainabl­e and there is a low value in these recovered plastics, Fellows said. Often these plastics are harder to recycle, are contaminat­ed by food, are soft plastics, and manufactur­ers struggle to make any profit from recycling them.

Clean paper, flattened cardboard, plastics 1, 2, and 5 — like milk and soft drink bottles, large yoghurt and icecream containers — can be recycled. Food and drink cans, rinsed bottles and containers without lids can also be put into recycling bins. All food scraps, raw or uncooked, fruit and vegetables, meat, dairy, bread, and coffee grinds, are acceptable except compostabl­e bags. Most rinsed glass bottles and jars without lids can be put into the glass recycling crate, however, no broken glass, lightbulbs, cookware, or drinking glasses can.

All other waste, excluding garden waste, hot ashes, medical waste, building material, chemicals and hazardous items, and large household items, can go in the rubbish bin.

 ?? PHOTO / GEORGE NOVAK PHOTO / FILE ?? Tauranga City Council waste and sustainabi­lity manager Sam Fellows.
Waste Watchers Ltd director Marty Hoffart
Tauranga creates more urban waste per capita than the New Zealand average.
PHOTO / GEORGE NOVAK PHOTO / FILE Tauranga City Council waste and sustainabi­lity manager Sam Fellows. Waste Watchers Ltd director Marty Hoffart Tauranga creates more urban waste per capita than the New Zealand average.

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