The Scotsman

Service recycling unused golf clubs up to par with five-figure cash injection

● Aim to tee up pilot scheme to become sustainabl­e business model and expand

- By EMMA NEWLANDS emma.newlands@jpress.co.uk

A Scottish-based pilot scheme giving unused golf clubs a new lease of life has been granted a five-figure sum as it looks to become a sustainabl­e business model.

Garage2gre­en, which teed off earlier this year and is supported by Scottish Golf, has been granted almost £56,000 from Zero Waste Scotland’s Circular Economy Investment Fund (supported by the Scottish Government and the European Regional Developmen­t Fund).

Various golf clubs are signed up to use the service, and it says it is already over-subscribed.

Garage 2 green aims to reduce waste, looking to get unused clubs into the hands of keen players – or even remanufact­ured or recycled into new items if they are too worn to use. It is a “circular economy” service, whereby materials and products are kept in use for as long as possible

Almost half of all directly re usable clubs collected to date have been donated to charity Blythswood Care, and eventually some will be distribute­d to golf academies – encouragin­g new players to try out the game.

Garage2gre­en founder Geoff Sampson, whose circular economy-focused company Circulogic is behind the idea, is researchin­g product developmen­t options to keep the materials in use and out of landfill.

Options under considerat­ion include bespoke lighting and furniture using carbon fibre shafts and remanufact­uring and recycling options for the rubber grips.

Sampson said :“My vision for the service was borne out of having a pile of clubs in my own garage that I’d kept hold of, but never got round to passing on or selling… it became apparent that so many clubs just sit around unused, until people just want them cleared out of the way.

“Having worked in the waste and recycling sector for over 20 years I was keen to set up a practical service that supports reuse and remanufact­uring.”

He said the investment has enabled the idea to increase in scale. “My hope is that the pilot is well-received, that we can engage the wider golfing industry and that we can build a sustainabl­e business model enabling future expansion.”

Zero Waste Scotland chief executive Iain Gulland said Garage2gre­en is “a great idea to tap into a wasted resource". Zero Waste Scotland leads on delivery of the £73 million Resource Efficient Cir - cular Economy Accelerato­r Programme, which aims to improve the economic performanc­e of SMES while at the same time reducing the impact of economic activity on the natural environmen­t

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