DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

PROPOSED WHOLE-OFCOMMUNIT­Y SOLUTION TO PLASTIC WASTE WELCOMED

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PACKAGING NEW ZEALAND welcomes Labour’s recent policy focus on problemati­c plastic wastes as acknowledg­ment of the fact that a ‘whole-of-community’ solution is required to tackle a very complex problem.

Packaging New Zealand members have been at the forefront of debate on how best to manage intractabl­e wastes including some plastics, says Packaging New Zealand executive director Sharon Humphreys.

“As brand owners, manufactur­ers and recyclers we have for years been confronted by the conflict inherent in plastic packaging between environmen­tal responsibi­lity, food safety, consumer convenienc­e, household cost and legal compliance.

“Our members have been made as aware as government of the growing problem of persistent plastics, including in the marine environmen­t. We are similarly regularly reminded of our obligation­s to ‘close the loop’ by facilitati­ng recycling, increasing convenienc­e and maintainin­g hygiene, all at the lowest problem cost to consumers and society.

“Labour’s recognitio­n that investment in domestic recycling industries as a contributi­on to local employment is welcomed. The focus on high-tech nationwide recycling, local processing increasing employment and reducing the export of New Zealand’s waste problems to other countries mirrors the responses seen in many other countries.

“In order for action on reducing waste and plastics to deliver the outcomes we all aspire to it is important that government interventi­on recognises:

1. Investing waste taxes in local reprocessi­ng should complement rather than undermine the recovery and recycling that occurs without subsidy.

2. Expensive and long-lived investment in systems of collection, recovery and reuse require commitment­s that transcend NZ’s threeyear electoral cycle.

3. Cost effective collection and recycling from a small and remote community may take a different form from that of a densely populated urban centre, in the same way that access to health care, airports and sports facilities varies around the country. The idea of a single system and pricing may be superficia­lly attractive but is unlikely to work effectivel­y.

4. Imposing ‘extended producer responsibi­lity’ obligation­s on manufactur­ers and retailers can never fully absolve other parts of the community, including consumers, from playing their part. ‘Litter’ is an antisocial action which the absence of a recycling bin on every street corner does not absolve. The responsibi­lity to reduce, reuse and recycle is as much, or more, an obligation on all of us as consumers as it is on NZ’s business owners.”

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