Waikato Herald

Waste innovator opens Aussie site

Special recycling facility opened by Hamilton based SAVEBOARD

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Hamilton-based packaging waste innovator SAVEBOARD just opened a special recycling facility in Warragamba, Australia, west of Sydney.

Following the model of its Hamilton plant in Te Rapa, the new Australian facility turns beverage carton packaging waste like Tetra Pak container and coffee cups into sustainabl­e building materials saving soft plastics and mixed fibre from landfill.

It is Australia’s first beverage carton recycling facility which can process up to 4000 tonnes of used materials each year and employs up to 12 local staff to operate the plant.

SAVEBOARD chief executive and co-founder Paul Charteris says the new $5.5 million facility supports the circular economy and has a positive impact on the environmen­t and climate change.

“This facility will enhance the constructi­on industry’s drive towards more sustainabl­e constructi­on practices, while also showing consumers the importance and value in recycling and opting for recyclable products in their day-to-day lives,” Charteris says.

SAVEBOARD, which opened its first New Zealand recycling facility in Te Rapa in June last year, has the Asian Pacific distributi­on rights for wasteto-building material technology developed in the United States where it has been widely used for more than a decade.

The Hamilton and Australian plants produce an alternativ­e to convention­al plasterboa­rd, plywood or particle board by reprocessi­ng liquid paperboard beverage containers, including aluminium-lined aseptic packages and non-aluminium-lined containers together with material

from industrial processes.

The SAVEBOARD process uses heat and compressio­n to bond the materials together which eliminates the need for glues or other chemical additives. This building material is 100 per cent recyclable as it is possible to recover the offcuts and endof-life boards to remanufact­ure them into new board products.

The Hamilton facility has a maximum production capacity of 200,000 constructi­on boards a year and diverts a total of over 1000 tonnes of waste (Tetra Pak, soft plastics, mixed fibre) from landfill.

SAVEBOARD products have so far been used in Kāinga Ora housing projects, as a feature wall in Contact Energy’s corporate head office in

Wellington, as constructi­on hoardings by Auckland building company Naylor Love, in Woolworths Australia stores, and in KFC Australia takeaway outlets.

The Australian facility was supported by the Australian Government’s Recycling Modernisat­ion Fund and the New South Wales State Government’s Waste Less, Recycle More initiative.

Managing director of Tetra Pak Australia and New Zealand, Andrew Pooch, says he was “incredibly proud” to be part of the sustainabi­lity journey as the company looks at more innovative ways to convert carton packaging waste into “useful applicatio­ns” and contribute to a strong circular economy.

“This is part of our ongoing sustainabi­lity commitment, as we look to enable more packaging to become 100 per cent recyclable or reusable, in line with the 2025 National Packaging Targets,” Pooch says. “By partnering with SAVEBOARD, we’re showing that innovation in recycling comes in many forms, and consumers can see first-hand how they can contribute to a more sustainabl­e future.”

SAVEBOARD is quickly gaining support across the ditch as the Victorian State Government already contribute­d $1 million for a second Australian SAVEBOARD facility in Campbellfi­eld, Melbourne, which is set to open in late 2024.

The Australian plant is a collaborat­ion between Tetra Pak and SIG Combibloc in Australia under the umbrella of the Global Recycling Alliance for Beverage Cartons and the Environmen­t (GRACE). It is also a joint initiative with SAVEBOARD and its supporters Freightway­s and Closed Loop. To find out more about SAVEBOARD visit their website.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? From left: Paul Charteris (SAVEBOARD), Kathy Giunta (director of Circular Economy Programs, NSW EPA), Nathaniel Smith (MP for Wollondill­y), Matt Gould (mayor of Wollondill­y Shire Council) and Andrew Pooch (Tetra Pak managing director for Australia and New Zealand).
Photos / Supplied From left: Paul Charteris (SAVEBOARD), Kathy Giunta (director of Circular Economy Programs, NSW EPA), Nathaniel Smith (MP for Wollondill­y), Matt Gould (mayor of Wollondill­y Shire Council) and Andrew Pooch (Tetra Pak managing director for Australia and New Zealand).
 ?? ?? Paul Charteris with the building material made from recycled beverage cartons.
Paul Charteris with the building material made from recycled beverage cartons.

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