Otago Daily Times

Praise for public plastic recycling trial

- JOHN GIBB

DUNEDIN firm Packit Packaging, which makes plastic food containers, has been praised by the plastics industry for its innovative public trial, launched in the city yesterday, to encourage recycling of polypropyl­ene food containers.

‘‘We certainly applaud them for that initiative,’’ Plastics New Zealand chief executive Ken Sowman said.

The move also showed that ‘‘postconsum­er polypropyl­ene can be recycled’’ in New Zealand, Mr Sowman, of Auckland, said.

Plastics New Zealand is the industry’s national associatio­n.

New Zealand has long had a successful, internal businessto­business recycling programme for number 5 plastics: light, rigid plastics used in food containers like ice cream and yoghurt pottles.

But yesterday’s initiative, undertaken and funded by Packit, is believed to be the first move in New Zealand to foster recycling of polypropyl­ene after consumers have used it.

The firm will provide a recycling bin at Centre City New World as a trial for the next three months, to receive the used plastic containers, after consumers have washed and cleaned them.

Packit directors Jan Swann and Chris Mcbride said ‘‘Number 5 PP’’ plastics included ‘‘widemouthe­d squeeze sauce bottles, food storage or lunch boxes, and ice cream or dairy containers’’ and the term ‘‘Number 5 PP’’, was on the container base.

The initiative also showed ‘‘we care’’ and met a growing public demand for recycling, they said.

Packit would help recycle all PP plastics, not just its own containers.

The polypropyl­ene would go to Christchur­ch for recycling then return to Dunedin to make more containers.

Mr Mcbride said Number 1 and 2 graded plastics, including, respective­ly, soft drink bottles and milk jugs, were already recycled in this country.

But valuable grade 5 plastics had been ‘‘commingled’’ within grades 3 to 7, and sent to China.

But after China recently largely stopped importing the plastics, Packit wanted to help, he said.

 ?? PHOTOS: PETER MCINTOSH ?? Recycling polypropyl­ene . . . Dunedin firm Packit Packaging sales director Jan Swann at yesterday’s launch of a city trial to recycle number 5 plastics: light, rigid plastic containers for ice cream and other foods.
PHOTOS: PETER MCINTOSH Recycling polypropyl­ene . . . Dunedin firm Packit Packaging sales director Jan Swann at yesterday’s launch of a city trial to recycle number 5 plastics: light, rigid plastic containers for ice cream and other foods.
 ??  ?? Chris Mcbride
Chris Mcbride

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