Otago Daily Times

Solution not ideal: Walker

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

TRUCKING recycling 200km to be sorted is ‘‘slightly different’’ from trucking waste the same distance to be landfilled, a Dunedin city councillor says.

However in ‘‘a perfect world’’ processing Dunedin’s recycling in Timaru would not be the plan, Cr Steve Walker said.

At a closeddoor meeting about three years ago, Cr Walker was one of two councillor­s to vote against investigat­ing the financial implicatio­ns of transporti­ng waste out of district, before councillor­s ultimately approved lodging the consent applicatio­n for Dunedin’s next landfill at Smooth Hill.

Now, the city’s kerbside collection contractor EnviroWast­e and local recycling plant Oji Fibre Solutions (OjiFS) have failed to reach a deal to extend their agreement.

So from next month, Dunedin’s recycling will be trucked north to

Timaru for processing before a new recycling plant is opened in Dunedin in two years’ time.

Cr Walker said it would not have worked out that way in ‘‘a perfect world’’.

‘‘I am philosophi­cally opposed to exporting our waste to other districts.

‘‘Recycling — if it is destined to be reused — is a slightly different matter,’’ Cr Walker said.

‘‘That said, in a perfect world it would have been convenient if the stars had aligned on this one, in terms of our [Dunedin’s] new facility being available sooner.’’

Because the Dunedin City Council was not party to the OjiFSEnvir­oWaste negotiatio­ns, it would be unprofessi­onal to comment on why a deal could not be struck, he said.

Cr Marie Laufiso, the other councillor to oppose an investigat­ion into trucking waste out of the district, said she voted with Cr Walker for the same philosophi­cal reasons.

And she supported his stance on the present arrangemen­t, she said.

When the interim measure of trucking recycling north for sorting was first reported by the Otago Daily Times earlier this month, an Enviro NZ spokeswoma­n said the council was ‘‘fully aware’’ of the plans.

One truck would make the round trip to Timaru once a day in the interim arrangemen­t as the council and Enviro NZ partnered to build a new resource recovery facility in Dunedin, due to open in about two years’ time.

Once it was operationa­l, the city’s kerbside recycling would be processed there, the spokeswoma­n said.

One truck a day of recycling transporte­d 200km north to Timaru is significan­tly less than the proposed nearly three trucks a day, or about 1000 trucks a year, of rubbish that would have been transporte­d 200km south to the AB Lime landfill at Winton.

And the council’s consent applicatio­n for extending the life of the Green Island landfill shows the council’s investigat­ion into trucking waste to the AB Lime landfill found it did not stack up financiall­y, and, in addition, would create a significan­t amount of carbon emissions, wearandtea­r on roads and congestion.

When the ODT asked the council if it was concerned about wear and tear on roads or the emissions produced by trucking recycling to Timaru, a spokesman said steps were being made to ensure the recycling was being transporte­d efficientl­y, and that the present arrangemen­t was only temporary.

 ?? ?? Steve Walker
Steve Walker

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