Sunday News

TRASH TALK

As Kiwi rubbish increasing­ly becomes Asia’s problem, Madison Reidy finds there are no easy solutions to New Zealand’s escalating recycling problem.

-

CHINA’S import ban on dirty plastic has thrown the spotlight on our reliance on Asia’s recycling plants, proving a need for facilities here.

But the Government has indicated it is unlikely to be throwing more money into getting recycling plants off the ground here, meaning Kiwi recycling will continue to be shipped overseas.

From this month, China will no longer accept many different types of waste, including all plastics, because of contaminat­ion problems.

The move has sent recycling companies around the world into a tailspin as they barter for space at south-east Asia processing facilities.

Last year New Zealand recycling companies sent 41 million kilograms of plastic waste to other countries to be processed, Statistics New Zealand export data revealed.

More than 7 million kilograms of New Zealands plastic waste was shipped to China last year. Hong Kong, a separate import jurisdicti­on, received 13.5 million kg, and another 19 million kg was sent to Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and Vietnam.

Eugenie Sage, the associate Environmen­t Minister responsibl­e for waste, said China’s ban had created significan­t challenges for recycling companies here, and more waste would go to Indonesia in the interim.

She agreed that millions of kilograms of recyclable rubbish being sent to Asia was ‘‘probably not’’ common knowledge to New Zealanders.

‘‘The problem of waste we are sending to China is small compared to other countries. I’m not going to use a strong word like ashamed…[But] yes, we need to do more to process it in New Zealand.’’

Reducing the amount of waste going to landfill is a goal in the confidence and supply agreement between the Green Party and the Labour Party, but reducing the amount of waste being shipped offshore is not.

Sage would not say whether she would introduce a target around it. She was still working on how the Government would best incentivis­e waste being processed here.

‘‘We want more onshore processing, but whether penalising people that are exporting it is the way to do it, I do not know that it is.’’

What Sage is considerin­g is applying the landfill levy to all landfills to boost the Waste Minimisati­on Fund.

Using Ministry for the Environmen­t funds to build a recycling processing facility here to turn waste into new products was not an option, she said.

She would rather give funding grants to companies that decide to do that instead, like Astron Plastics Group and Flight Plastics had.

The problem is, recycling is a low margin business built on the economies of scale.

Reclaim chief executive John Gibson said New Zealand completely relied on offshore recycling facilities.

If there was money to be made from an onshore processing facility, more companies would have built them.

‘‘The fact they have not [been built] says a lot. It is more economic to send it overseas.’’

All up, the plastic waste we shipped overseas last year was worth $13.2 million, every kilogram of plastic earning an average of just 25 cents.

Australia-based Visy Recycling, Reclaim, Green Gorilla, EnviroWast­e and Waste Management are the major operators that collect and sort New Zealanders’ waste.

None of them process it for reuse as new products. Rather, they clean it and organise it into waste groups to send elsewhere. Sometimes that elsewhere is a landfill.

Green Gorilla chief operating officer Elaine Morgan said China’s decision had skyrockete­d the price to send plastic to recycling sorting facilities here.

It was now cheaper to send plastic to landfill than give it to companies who shipped it offshore, she said.

Such companies are believed have brokers on the ground in Asia, sniffing out the best deal they can find at local processing facilities.

Plastics New Zealand environmen­tal projects manager Simon Wilkinson said China was the cheapest destinatio­n to ship plastic to.

China notified the World Trade Organisati­on of its new standards in July last year, so New Zealand’s recycling brokers had already organised alternativ­e locations but those places were more expensive.

Morgan said companies that sorted mostly plastic, like Visys, were feeling the heat of

We want more onshore processing, but whether penalising people that are exporting it is the way to do it, I do not know that it is.’ EUGENIE SAGE

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand