Taupo & Turangi Herald

Grants boon to recycling farm plastics sold in NZ

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In July, the Ministry for the Environmen­t declared that all farm plastics sold in New Zealand will have to be recycled or reused, and it has now made two major grants to help this become a reality.

One grant will help the onfarm plastic recycling scheme Plasback purchase baling and wrapping equipment so it can transport waste plastic more cheaply.

The other will help the rural recycling programme Agrecovery devise a scheme to collect farm plastics that are uneconomic­al to recycle. These include fertiliser sacks, feed sacks and bulk tonne bags of woven polypropyl­ene or polyethyle­ne.

Now that the Ministry has decided that all farm plastics sold in New Zealand will become priority products under the Waste Minimisati­on Act, they will have to be covered by a product stewardshi­p scheme.

This means everyone in the farm plastics supply chain — from manufactur­ers through to consumers — will be responsibl­e for recycling leftover plastic products and plastic packaging.

Plasback manager Chris Hartshorne says the Ministry of the Environmen­t’s Covid Response and Recovery Fund (CRRF) is donating $442,000 to improve its collection efforts, and Plasback will match this amount.

“We will use the $884,000 to buy three new purpose-built balers, five stationary wrappers, and three telehandle­rs. Our balers compact the waste plastic so it can be shipped efficientl­y for reprocessi­ng.

“We will install one baler in Northland, one in the Bay of Plenty and one in South Canterbury. The reason we need them is that it costs too much to ship unbaled plastic long distances. For example, we now ship loose plastic from Northland to Matamata, where it is baled, but this is inefficien­t. With a baler in Northland we will be able to reduce the number of trips we make to Matamata by 75 per cent.”

Chris says these efforts are aimed at keeping the cost of collecting plastic from farms as low as possible. The collection fee Plasback charges to collect used silage wrap from the farm gate has not changed in 14 years.

“More and more companies recognise the value in being part of an accredited recycling scheme. Silage wrap suppliers

Grevillia Ag and Nutritech have now joined Plasback. This means they can support their customers’ efforts to recycle their waste plastic.

“We have also had requests to collect plastic from a brewery in Northland, a scaffoldin­g company in Dunedin, and manufactur­ing companies. We are now collecting lots of plastic twine from kiwifruit growers.”

Agrecovery commercial manager Richard Carroll says the WMF is contributi­ng $178,200 so that Agrecovery can develop a preferred product stewardshi­p scheme for farm plastic for the Ministry for the Environmen­t.

“This project will bolster existing recycling services for farmers and growers, like the ones Agrecovery provides for agrichemic­als and Plasback provides for silage and bale wrap.”

Richard says there is considerab­le scope to reduce waste and increase the recovery of used resources. Often farmers burn or bury waste onfarm because other options are limited.

For more informatio­n contact Plasback’s Chris Hartshorne on 03 338 2400 or email chartshorn­e@agpac.co. nz.

 ??  ?? Plasback now collects plastic twine from kiwifruit growers in the Bay of Plenty.
Plasback now collects plastic twine from kiwifruit growers in the Bay of Plenty.

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