Otago Daily Times

Potential plastics solution

- HAMISH MACLEAN hamish.maclean@odt.co.nz

A NEW Zealand solution to the plastics problem could be the country’s next ‘‘kiwifruit moment’’.

Waitaki Resource Recovery Park trust manager Dave Clare said Dunedinbas­ed Polybuild’s solution to the recycling crunch from China’s waste import ban could not come at a better time, as markets for plastic dry up overseas.

Polybuild project coordinato­r Rob Owen said the company planned to build a research and developmen­t site in Oamaru and a successful bid to the Government’s $1 billionaye­ar provincial growth fund would help the company to ‘‘take a 10year project and deliver it in two’’.

Using any type of plastic, other than polyvinyl chloride (PVC), and a fine aggregate such as ground glass, sand, quarry dust, or crushed steel slag the company would produce building materials that, ultimately, could be produced around the country and used in New Zealand homes.

AS the recycling crunch from China’s waste import ban hits and markets for recycled plastics dry up, a Dunedin company is eyeing Oamaru’s resource recovery park as a possible starting point for a solution.

Polybuild project coordinato­r Rob Owen said the company planned to build a research and developmen­t site in Oamaru to ‘‘upcycle’’ plastic from the Waitaki Resource Recovery Park into a composite material.

Using even lowgrade plastics, the company would produce building materials that could eventually be made around the country.

The materials used would include lowdensity polyethyle­ne, used in bottles, shopping bags, and plastic wraps, polypropyl­ene, furniture, luggage, toys, polystyren­e, hard packing, refrigerat­or trays and CD cases and other plastics including acrylic, nylon and fibreglass, along with a fine aggregate such as ground glass, sand, quarry dust, or crushed steel slag, Mr Owen said.

The technology was pioneered in Russia and had been used in smallscale operations internatio­nally, but if it could be produced on a large scale, it could be a win for New Zealand environmen­tally.

‘‘The whole big deal with plastics isn’t in developing countries, it’s here — now,’’ Mr Owen said.

‘‘There’s nowhere for our plastic to go, and you’re not talking small amounts. You’ve got to do something that burns huge amounts of plastic if you’re going to recycle it within our economy. And it’s got to go somewhere — we intend it to go to building houses.

‘‘In North Otago, we will be designing and manufactur­ing the products. At this stage we’re about the material [but] once you’ve made the material, you have got to make something from it.

‘‘That’s what the R&D site in Oamaru is all about.

‘‘The way you’re doing your recycling there, we don’t have to put a wash plant in, because it’s all coming to us clean. So we can take a whole lot of cost out of it.’’

The Oamaru material was preferable to Dunedin’s recy

cling, as it was handsorted and clean, with lower levels of contaminat­ion.

Waitaki Resource Recovery Park trust manager Dave Clare said demand for recycling had its ebbs and flows, but ‘‘long term, there will need to be major, major, major changes’’.

‘‘The Chinese have made the world sit up and say ‘this plastic thing is something we can no longer pretend we’ll fix’,’’ he said.

‘‘They have stopped the plastics, because of the contaminat­ion. Essentiall­y, they became the rubbish tip of the world.’’

 ?? PHOTO: HAMISH MACLEAN ?? Plastic plans . . . Waitaki Resource Recovery Trust manager Dave Clare holds a composite Roman roofing tile made in the Ukraine. Mr Clare says composite bricks for use on houses could be an Oamarumade answer to the current plastic woes.
PHOTO: HAMISH MACLEAN Plastic plans . . . Waitaki Resource Recovery Trust manager Dave Clare holds a composite Roman roofing tile made in the Ukraine. Mr Clare says composite bricks for use on houses could be an Oamarumade answer to the current plastic woes.

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