Manawatu Standard

Government proposes packaging schemes

- Amber-leigh Woolf

New Zealand’s growing waste problem could be slashed dramatical­ly if manufactur­ers took care of their own rubbish, the Government says.

New schemes being proposed could remove the burden of plastic packaging, bottles and electronic waste from consumers.

Yesterday, Associate Environmen­t Minister Eugenie Sage said New Zealand’s current economy is a ‘‘take, make and dispose’’ model, and she wants it to change.

‘‘Regulated product stewardshi­p is a step towards changing that and to designing waste out of production.’’

It means consumers and councils will no longer have to deal with it – and the manufactur­ers can take it back. Other countries already have the schemes, and Fost-plus, a national scheme for all packaging in Belgium, has an 85 per cent recovery rate at €7.90 (NZ$ 13.30) per person per year.

The not-for-profit organisati­on is financed by industry and recycles glass, paper, cardboard, plastic bottles, metal packaging and cartons.

To date, product stewardshi­p in New Zealand has been voluntary and there are 14 schemes, but they have not significan­tly reduced waste. It’s the first time the Government has seriously considered the potential for regulated product stewardshi­p as allowed in the Waste Minimisati­on Act.

Sage said banning plastic items individual­ly wouldn’t work.

Instead, she hoped the schemes would encourage manufactur­ers to switch to more sustainabl­e packaging.

Container deposit refund schemes could provide a small financial reward for customers returning their packaging, she said.

Products wouldn’t be more expensive, she said.

‘‘Instead of using nature as a receptacle for waste and offloading the costs on to councils and communitie­s to collect fast food packaging left all over the street, it means that brand owners and retailers all contribute to those costs.’’

Countdown general manager sustainabi­lity Kiri Hannifin said when it came to packaging, ‘‘we are stuck’’.

‘‘Foodstuffs, Countdown, Air New Zealand ... none of us can do it on our own. The only way for us to do it is to work together.’’

Dealing with packaging and especially plastic was the hardest thing she had had to deal, Hannifin said. ‘‘If we can do this as a nation, then what a win.’’

Local Government New Zealand president Dave Cull said the New Zealand public were subsidisin­g waste producers ‘‘who churn out cheap, largely unrecyclab­le packaging, plastics, e-waste and other materials’’.

He welcomed the proposed schemes, but they were just one of many solutions needed, he said.

‘‘We see mandatory product stewardshi­p as being one piece of the puzzle, along with the adoption of a nationwide, strategic approach for recyclable­s and for the waste disposal levy to cover more landfills, so that there is more funding for onshore recycling facilities.’’

A consultati­on document, ‘‘Proposed priority products and priority product stewardshi­p scheme guidelines’’, was announced in Wellington yesterday.

Costs and benefits will be announced and consulted on before regulation­s are passed, and draft regulation­s for each priority product will be released for consultati­on from 2020.

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