Weekend Herald

Eliza gives environmen­tal cause a big push

Eliza McCartney puts her new course of study to good use in phone recycling

- Tom Dillane

You realise there’s so much we do to abuse our planet. It gives us everything we have, yet we really are ignorant to that and don’t treat it how we should. Eliza McCartney

After a year of undiagnose­d injury has left Eliza McCartney’s feet frustratin­gly flat on the track, a change of career direction outside athletics is providing a welcome jolt of perspectiv­e.

The Olympic bronze medal pole vaulter last year changed her university degree to environmen­tal science out of a “deep love” for the Kiwi landscape, and she’s become the face of a longstandi­ng initiative to preserve it.

McCartney is encouragin­g Kiwis to recycle their old mobiles and prevent e-waste as the new ambassador of RE:mobile — with a campaign intricatel­y tied up with the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

The 22-year-old told the Weekend Herald she hopes helping RE:mobile’s October push for awareness will be her initial step to becoming a leader in conservati­on issues post-athletics.

“It was only with doing more study at a tertiary level I started to really get into it [environmen­tal issues],” McCartney said.

“It almost makes you angry; you realise there’s so much we do to abuse our planet. It gives us everything we have, yet we really are ignorant to that and don’t treat it how we should.

“That sparked wanting to know more, know solutions. I’ve just fallen into that and become really fascinated.”

Mid-2018, McCartney transferre­d from a science degree majoring in physiology at the University of Auckland to a pure environmen­tal science degree at Massey University, which she largely does by correspond­ence around the world-athletics tour.

“It hasn’t been that long but I’ve been loving it; it feels more like a hobby than something I have to study,” she says. “Science has always been my area, what I’ve been good at, and I’ve always had a curiosity for how things work within the natural world.

“I really enjoyed biology at school and that led into physiology around how the human body works. But just growing up in New Zealand, we also have a great appreciati­on for what we have outdoors.”

Establishe­d in 2011, and accredited by the Ministry for the Environmen­t in 2014, the RE:mobile scheme partners with 2degrees, Spark and Vodafone to raise awareness around mobile phone recycling — with 95 per cent of materials reusable. McCartney’s associatio­n with RE:mobile has also been a means to redirect some energy while unable to compete.

She says the injury that forced her to pull out of the World Athletics Championsh­ips in Doha this month has only recently been correctly diagnosed as deep gluteal syndrome — a nerve condition causing pain down her hamstring.

“When I tried to run at speed, which of course pole vault involves, I just was in pain and inhibited,” McCartney says. “Thankfully that is no longer an issue and I’m into normal training. I’ve had a really tough year and I haven’t been able to compete, which obviously isn’t great before an Olympics, but I still have our whole domestic season ahead.

“I’m feeling a lot more confident than even a couple of weeks ago that I’ll be ready in time for Tokyo.”

All the medals awarded at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics will be made from recycled electronic waste. Organisers have collected 30.3kg of gold, 4100kg of silver and 2700kg of bronze to create the 5000 medals, and components from Kiwi mobiles recycled through RE:mobile will also be sent to Japan.

NZ Telecommun­ications Forum chief executive Geoff Thorn, who oversees RE:mobile, says the choice of McCartney as ambassador aims to target a younger audience in possession of many of the 1.2 million mobiles gathering dust in Kiwi cupboards. “You put that together with Eliza’s interest in the environmen­t and it’s a good mix. It sits well with us.”

Though only studying part time has McCartney realistica­lly aiming to graduate in 2025, she sees her future in environmen­tal advocacy postathlet­ics. “It’s hard to imagine what it will exactly look like at the moment but that’s absolutely a path I would love to go down,” she says.

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Olympic pole vaulting star Eliza McCartney is now heading up the RE:Mobile appeal.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Olympic pole vaulting star Eliza McCartney is now heading up the RE:Mobile appeal.

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