Sunday Star-Times

Fonterra rises to challenge as plastic backlash builds

An audit has revealed just how much work the dairy giant faces to reach its goal of 100 per cent recycled packaging. Rob Stock reports.

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An email to Fonterra from a disenchant­ed recycling-yard worker in July told the cooperativ­e of her shock at the number of dairy pottles, tubs and containers being sent to landfill.

‘‘One of my jobs is to sort through each recycle bag and remove the ‘other’ plastics numbered 3 and above,’’ the email read.

‘‘I put these into our rubbish skips for disposal to our closest landfill.

‘‘It bothers me that such a huge proportion of the ‘bad plastics’ I remove from amongst the ‘recyclable plastics 1s and 2s’ are from packaging of dairy products.’’

Containers for ice cream, yoghurt, butter, margarine, sour cream, cottage cheese and cream cheese were all going to landfill.

Fonterra has committed to 100 per cent of its packaging being recyclable by 2025, and has conducted an internal audit to assess how much was actually being recycled.

‘‘We’re going for 100 recyclable, and recycled in practice,’’ Fonterra head of environmen­t Trish KirklandSm­ith said.

The dairy cooperativ­e has completed a global audit of what happened to the 150 tonnes of packaging it bought in each year, including products sold overseas.

Kirkland-Smith said about 60 per cent was recyclable and recycled. Another 20 to 25 per cent was recyclable, but was not always recycled. These included its ‘‘light-proof’’ Anchor milk bottles, which were made of layers of number 2 plastics, and were not as easy to recycle as clear milk containers.

Then there was the packaging that was ‘‘problemati­c’’ either because it could not be recycled easily – such as snap-off yoghurt pottles which contained polystyren­e – or because it was generally thrown into the rubbish bin. This included foil caps from drinks, Tetra Pak packaging for drinks and drinking straws.

Fonterra brands managing director Brett Henshaw said about 85 per cent of its consumer packaging of products sold in New Zealand was ‘‘technicall­y recyclable’’.

But around the country there was ‘‘massive variabilit­y’’ about what was recycled because each council arranged its own schemes, he said.

Fonterra did not know what proportion of its light-proof recyclable bottles were recycled.

It found 14 local councils separated and recycled it, and a further six definitely sent them to landfill.

Another 42 councils collected the Anchor bottle and sorted it into the mixed grade plastic collection of shampoo bottles, detergent bottles, with plastics ranging from numbers 3 to 7.

Fonterra did not know what then happened to that plastic.

It used to be easy to sell plastics 3 to 7 overseas for recycling, but in 2017 China made its ‘‘Sword’’ announceme­nt that it would no longer take so much plastic waste from the West, and would accept only higher-value plastics – those labelled 1 and 2 on the bottom of consumer packaging.

Overnight, the value dropped out of plastics 3 to 7, KirklandSm­ith said.

‘‘It’s cheaper to send it to the landfill, which is awful,’’ she said.

Then the Green Party entered government in coalition with Labour, and plastic waste became a political priority.

The Government wanted businesses to be responsibl­e for what happened to their packaging after consumers bought their products.

It planned to introduce ‘‘product stewardshi­p’’ laws covering ‘‘priority’’ products like single-use plastic bottles. Industries would have to codesign schemes with the Government to ensure collection of priority products, followed by recycling or re-use.

Associate Environmen­t Minister Eugenie Sage said at the time that the costs of collecting and managing consumer packaging were borne by councils and the wider community, rather than the people who made and used the products.

These costs were exacerbate­d

by packaging design which often reduced the value of the material, she said.

The Product Stewardshi­p Council estimated that just 30 to 40 per cent of beverage containers were recycled and reused.

Plastic drinks bottles, bottle caps and lids, and glass bottles made up about 20 per cent of all litter items, and were three of the top 10 items found in beach clean-ups.

One of the examples the Government used of good product stewardshi­p was Fonterra’s milk in schools programme.

Milk was delivered to schools in Tetra Paks, made of paper, plastic and foil. Children drank the milk, folded the packaging, which was then collected by Fonterra, bundled up, and shipped to Thailand to be recycled, Kirkland-Smith said.

‘‘Then it’s getting made into lots of different things, making school books, roof tiles, things like that,’’ she said.

Fonterra’s franchise operation delivering milk to schools and businesses also had a high recycling rate. The lightproof bottles went to a company making plastic fenceposts for farms.

Fonterra told the Government it did not favour a bottle exchange system involving a return to glass.

‘‘For glass to be a more sustainabl­e alternativ­e to plastic, bottles must be re-used several times before recycling,’’ Fonterra told the Government in its submission on product stewardshi­p.

‘‘Moving heavy glass around the country and back-and-forth to Auckland for cleaning and reusing would use a lot of emissions.

‘‘We’ve certainly looked into it, but without a well-developed nationwide system to sterilise and fill bottles for re-use at scale, it’s unfortunat­ely not viable for us at this time.’’

Dairy entreprene­ur Glen Herud has been capital-raising to expand his Happy Cow Milk Company, which would make milk available at dispensers in primary schools.

Supermarke­ts and big dairy producers weren’t interested in such systems, he said.

‘‘The reason supermarke­ts don’t want to do it is they think someone will get sick from not washing their bottle. It’s really a reputation issue for them. Their legal department­s aren’t willing to take the risk.

‘‘The milk processors, the people in charge of the factories, won’t even think about it.’’

Herud was using Fonterra’s recycling challenge as a clarioncal­l to investors in his PledgeMe capital-raising, telling investors that 78 per cent of all plastic bottles were not recycled, and that 250,000 tonnes of plastic waste went into landfills every year.

Sage said regulated product stewardshi­p schemes must go hand-in-hand with improved recycling infrastruc­ture, an expanded waste disposal levy, improved waste data, improved controls on the burning of farm waste, and proactive government procuremen­t.

And it would come at a higher cost to industry and consumers, Sage said in her consultati­on paper.

Kirkland-Smith said Fonterra now believed the long-term future was product stewardshi­p, which consumers were demanding.

‘‘Waste is tangible for people,’’ she said.

‘‘Consumers are so much more aware. They are making more informed choices, which is sending messages back to business, which is great.’’

And, ultimately, New Zealand could no longer expect to ship all its plastic waste to other countries to deal with, she said.

‘‘There’s no such thing as ‘away’ anymore,’’ said KirklandSm­ith. ‘‘We have to be responsibl­e for where it ends up.’’

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 ??  ?? Trish Kirkland-Smith
Trish Kirkland-Smith
 ??  ?? Founder of the Happy Cow Milk Company, Glen Herud wants to milk dispensers available in primary schools.
Founder of the Happy Cow Milk Company, Glen Herud wants to milk dispensers available in primary schools.
 ?? CHRISTEL YARDLEY/STUFF ?? Associate Environmen­t Minister Eugenie Sage aims to make the makers and retailers of single-use plastic bottles responsibl­e for ensuring they are collected and recycled.
CHRISTEL YARDLEY/STUFF Associate Environmen­t Minister Eugenie Sage aims to make the makers and retailers of single-use plastic bottles responsibl­e for ensuring they are collected and recycled.

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