Gulf News

Chew on this: Gum turns to gold

A BRITISH INVENTOR IS TURNING THE STUFF THAT PEOPLE FIRST CHEW IN DELIGHT AND EVENTUALLY SPIT OUT WITH INDIFFEREN­CE INTO HIGHLY USEFUL ITEMS

- LONDON BY LEE MANNION

What does the world spend about $25 billion (Dh92 billion) on each year, only to throw it away? The answer is chewing gum. It is a blight on city streets, expensive for local authoritie­s to deal with, and takes a heavy toll on the environmen­t, according to its critics.

But one woman in Britain is performing modern-day alchemy on it.

“When I started to look into it in 2006, gum had only been declared a litter in 2005. I was gobsmacked. We spend so much money clearing it up,” Gumdrop founder Anna Bullus said.

Money to clean

How much money? About 56 million pounds (Dh290 million; $79 million) a year in England alone, the government reckons, to rid the streets of this form of litter. Only cigarette butts are more prevalent.

After eight years of research, including working with materials scientists, Bullus found a way to compound discarded gum into pink pellets called gum-tec.

That processing is done by third parties. Gumdrop then sells the transforme­d material to firms that make all manner of items that more commonly use plastic or rubber, including ski-jacket toggles, flip-flops and reusable coffee cups.

The volumes are significan­t: last year the company, which has just three employees, recycled 25 tonnes of gum.

Bullus’s innovation goes some way to helping local councils save money.

“Councils have to use specialist equipment to remove (gum), which is both timeconsum­ing and very expensive,” said Martin Tett, the environmen­t spokesman for the Local Government Associatio­n (LGA).

And money is tight: austerity measures mean local councils are getting less cash from central government; the LGA reckons that between 2015 and 2020, councils will have lost three-quarters of their core central government funding.

“At a time when councils face considerab­le ongoing funding pressures, this is a growing cost pressure they could do without,” said Tett of the problem gumming up local streets.

For its source material, Gumdrop relies on the public to place chewed gum into its hot-pink bins that sit at 600 locations such as train stations, theme parks and universiti­es — a fivefold increase in bin sites since it started in 2015.

It makes money by charging councils for that service.

It also works with some on innovative fixes — such as on Kensington High Street in west London, a tourist hotspot because of its proximity to Kensington Palace, former home to the late Princess Diana.

Keyring balls

There the council handed out 5,000 strikingly pink keyring balls in which people could store used gum. When full, the chewer could mail the orb free of charge to Gumdrop; for every three sent in, Gumdrop would send them another.

Gumdrop also put up hardt-o-miss football-sized hotpink bins — which, naturally enough, were made from recycled gum.

The result was a 90 per cent drop in gum litter in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, according to Suez, the company contracted by the council to clean gum off its streets.

“Unfortunat­ely because of their budget, (the council) can’t afford to carry on using the bins,” said Bullus.

Budget buster?

Suez uses steam-cleaning machines to prise gum from the pavement. That gum, which cannot be recycled as it is too dirty, is then sent to a landfill site or for incinerati­on.

“We’re happy to take money off the council, but that’s not the point,” said Paul Siggery, a manager at Suez.

“The money they pay us comes from the people that pay their council tax. It’s costing them a fortune to clean this gum. That needs to be addressed.” Siggery said since Gumdrop’s campaign ended in May 2016, the pavements had returned to the state they were in previously.

Steam-cleaning has other costs too: because the process weakens the grouting that hold paving slabs in place, Siggery said, the slabs can move apart. That makes them a trip hazard, so the council has to spend yet more money making them safe.

“Something in that oily-based gum is eating into the concrete,” Siggery said.

$25b consumers around the world spend on chewing gum

 ??  ?? ■ ■ ■ The transforme­d material is sold to firms that make items such as coffee cups. ■ Gum-tec is also sold to firms that make flip-flops from rubber or plastic. A ‘Gumdrop on the Go’. Gum chewers can dispose of used gum in the pink ball before sending...
■ ■ ■ The transforme­d material is sold to firms that make items such as coffee cups. ■ Gum-tec is also sold to firms that make flip-flops from rubber or plastic. A ‘Gumdrop on the Go’. Gum chewers can dispose of used gum in the pink ball before sending...
 ??  ?? A Gumdrop bin in Cardiff, UK. The collected gum can be made into reusable cups, rulers and shoe soles.
A Gumdrop bin in Cardiff, UK. The collected gum can be made into reusable cups, rulers and shoe soles.

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