New recycling bins roll out to Waitakere and North Shore properties
The two cities are first in NZ to use wheeled bins for recycling
The first phase of New Zealand’s largest and newest recycling collection service is kicking off Monday with the delivery
of the initial 145,000 mobile recycling bins (MRBs) to Waitakere and North Shore City properties.
The two councils are the first in New Zealand to implement fortnightly recycling collections from 140-litre mobile bins.
Other cities in Australia and Canada have been successfully using the bins to increase recycling activity for several
years.
The recycling contract is part of a joint initiative between North Shore and Waitakere, which have contracted Onyx Group
to provide refuse and recycling services to both cities. The aim is to reduce waste and encourage people to recycle
more, but the councils have also identified significant savings by sharing these services.
“The ultimate goal is to reduce the amount of rubbish we are sending to landfill,” says Waitakere City Councillor Janet
Clews. “But by working together with our neighbours on the Shore we are gaining efficiencies in several areas that will
benefit both cities financially and environmentally.”
The councils are providing the blue and yellow bins to every property free of charge (75,000 on the Shore and 65,000 in
Waitakere). They will be delivered at a rate of approximately 3360 per day (1680 in each city) before 24 June.
Hobsonville residents will be first to receive the bins in Waitakere, with distribution carrying on down south through
Massey, Henderson, Te Atatu, New Lynn, Titirangi and Waitakere. On the Shore it will be Albany residents who will be
first to get their bins, with deliveries flowing south down the peninsula.
Street litter will also be reduced as the bins will protect the items inside from being blown about by the wind, some of
which end up blocking stormwater drains.
Wheeled bins are also safer for the user’s back as they remove the need for lifting. The safety of collection staff will
also be improved as they will no longer manually lift heavy crates or spend time in the middle of busy roads sorting
recyclables.
A purpose-built fleet of vehicles painted with an eye-catching new theme emphasising recycling and waste reduction will
empty the bins from both cities. The trucks will bring recyclables to Waitakere’s Refuse Transfer Station, where a new
sorting facility is being built.
The mobile bins will be collected fortnightly on normal rubbish days from 1 July, replacing the weekly collection of the
45L crates. Paper and cardboard (bundled separately beside the bin) will also be collected fortnightly, on the same day
that the bins are emptied. A calendar showing collections days for the year will be attached to all bins on delivery.
Individual street numbers will also be marked on every bin.
ENDS