Marlborough Express

Cotton buds next to go from shelves

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Plastic-stemmed cotton buds are to be pulled from supermarke­t shelves later this year as companies continue to clampdown on plastic products.

Foodstuffs, which operates New World, Pak ‘n Save and Four Square stores, announced the new initiative on Friday to mark World Oceans Day.

The announceme­nt comes as Foodstuffs presented a bench to Whale Watch Kaiko¯ ura, made from 16,000 recycled soft plastic bags and micro beads collected during a 2017 amnesty.

Micro beads were banned in New Zealand after it became clear the small particles could end up in the ocean, where they could be eaten by shellfish, fish and seabirds.

Foodstuffs New Zealand managing director Steve Anderson said the company cared deeply about its community, its people and the planet.

‘‘Foodstuffs is doing everything we can to reduce our environmen­tal footprint and nowhere is it more evident about how much this matters, than this wonderful place of Kaiko¯ ura.’’

Foodstuffs sustainabi­lity manager Mike Sammons said the waste treatment system relied on waste ‘‘settling’’ to the bottom.

‘‘If it’s a plastic item, such as a cotton bud with a plastic stem, it will float and that’s where it avoids all the filtration in the wastewater plants and can end up out to sea.

‘‘A lot of the marine ecology, such as the fish, will mistake them for food and they will consume them, and that’s where they enter the food chain and obviously as humans we’re dependant on seafood as well,’’ Sammons said.

Whale Watch Kaiko¯ ura general manager Kauahi Ngapora said the placement of the seat, overlookin­g a playground and the ocean, was special.

‘‘Firstly, it looks over our tamariki ... who are the next generation. They will inherit what we leave behind and I’m certain they will be much better stewards of our environmen­t.

‘‘It also looks over the ocean that we have out here, and this ocean is special to all of us here and it will enable us to reflect on the damage plastic can have on this environmen­t.

Associate Environmen­t Minister Eugenie Sage attended the unveiling of the bench seat on Friday and said she was delighted at how quickly New Zealand businesses were tackling the waste challenge.

‘‘The announceme­nt that Steve has made this morning of moving to ban plastic-stemmed cotton buds, following on from some of the initiative­s in the UK is quite a significan­t announceme­nt.

‘‘The new Government is moving to catch up, we’ve got quite a lot of work in the waste space but it’s brilliant to see businesses taking initiative.

‘‘I think there’s been a wide spread recognitio­n that we’ve got to change the way our economy operates, decouple economic growth from exploitati­on of nature.’’

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