Khaleej Times

Dutch cyclists can now ride down a bike path made of used plastic

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london — Dutch cyclists rode down the world’s first bike path made entirely of discarded plastic this week, in a move aimed at reducing the millions of tonnes wasted every year.

The 30-metre (100-ft) cycling path in the 1,300-year-old northern town of Zwolle contains the equivalent of 500,000 plastic bottle caps and is estimated to be two to three times more durable than traditiona­l roads.

Eight million tonnes of plastic — bottles, packaging and other waste — are dumped into the ocean every year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain, the United Nations Environmen­t Programme has said.

“This first pilot is a big step towards a sustainabl­e and futureproo­f road made of recycled plastic

waste,” the path’s inventors Anne Koudstaal and Simon Jorritsma said in a statement.

Leading environmen­tal expert Guus Velders welcomed the new initiative by Dutch engineerin­g firm KWS, pipe maker Wavin and

French oil major Total, saying it was a “positive step” towards a more circular use of materials.

However, Emma Priestland, campaigner with Friends of the Earth, said the solution to plastic pollution lay in preventing its unnecessar­y use in the first place.

“Using plastic to make bicycle paths may help to keep plastics out of landfill and ... but it’s still unclear what happens to this plastic as the surface of the path is worn away,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by email.

Cities such as London, Amsterdam and Paris are looking at how they can shift to a circular economy - reusing products, parts and materials, producing no waste or pollution and using fewer new resources and energy.

The Dutch government has pledged to halve its use of raw materials by 2030 and accelerate its shift towards a so-called “circular economy”. A second bike path is expected to open in the northeaste­rn Dutch village of Giethoorn in November. —

 ?? Photo courtesy PlasticRoa­d ?? PlasticRoa­d inventors Anne Koudstaal and Simon Jorritsma take a ride down the 30-metre stretch of the PlasticRoa­d bike path. —
Photo courtesy PlasticRoa­d PlasticRoa­d inventors Anne Koudstaal and Simon Jorritsma take a ride down the 30-metre stretch of the PlasticRoa­d bike path. —

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