The Northern Advocate

Create a sustainabl­e future

-

bring and reuse their own.

“If you were to purchase rice from the grocery store, the amount of packaging — whether plastic or otherwise — would be exponentia­lly more, as each kilo of rice has its own packaging,” they said.

“All the food we sell of course comes in some form of packaging.

“But buying in bulk ensures we minimise the amount of packaging, and our mission is to recycle as much of it as we possibly can.”

And their work is perhaps even more relevant this month, with Plastic Free July beginning in Australia in 2011, and growing to become a global movement seeking to free the world of plastic waste.

As consumer demand for more sustainabl­e options continues to rise, the Cooks said they were keen to broaden their offering of plastic-free alternativ­es.

“To grow this in the future, we’ll seek options that are plastic-free, ethically sourced and local,” they said. “For instance, we just got in these new sponges from a really cool little business down in Christchur­ch called “Good Girl. They are Konjac sponges made from the Konjac root and have no plastic, along with being biodegrada­ble. We strive to have more options like this.

With an awareness that scooping and packaging food takes a little longer than picking it off a shelf, the Cooks are endeavouri­ng to make shopping with them more convenient with an online option.

Customers are encouraged to drop off their own jars, which the Cooks use to package the order for later collection, with no additional charge.

Greenpeace Aotearoa recently highlighte­d the concerning claim that, globally, it was estimated only 9 per cent of all the plastic waste ever produced had been recycled, making the Cooks’ mission even more timely.

Accompanie­d by a giant albatross sculpture made of reclaimed plastic bottles, Greenpeace recently delivered a 100,000-strong petition to Parliament calling on the Government to ban single-use plastic bottles and incentivis­e reusable and refillable alternativ­es.

Greenpeace Aotearoa plastics campaigner Juressa Lee said companies like Coca-Cola sold a billion single-use plastic bottles in Aotearoa every year and were showing no sign of stopping without Government action to make them stop.

“This toroa sculpture here with me today was modelled off a young bird that died horribly of starvation after swallowing a whole plastic bottle,” Lee said.

“Plastic pollution kills, it never goes away and it is everywhere.

“It’s in the food we eat, the air we breathe and even in our placentas.

“This is a crisis and we have to see stronger action from our Government, starting with a ban on singleuse plastic bottles.”

Lee said it was clear, from the number of signatures, that the people of Aotearoa wanted more action to eliminate plastic pollution.

“The alternativ­es exist, we’re just missing the political will from this Government to stand up to the likes of Coca-Cola and protect us from plastic pollution.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand