10 June 2016
Soft Plastics Recycling Programme launches in the South Island
Recycling plastic bags just got easier for Cantabrians, with today’s South Island launch at New World Ilam of a
recycling scheme that’s already netting more than a tonne of soft plastics every week.
The Soft Plastics Recycling Programme will let people dispose of soft plastics, like shopping bags, bread bags and food
wrapping, into specially-designed bins located outside all New World supermarkets across Christchurch as well as
PAK’nSAVE Rangiora and PAK’nSAVE Riccarton, and other selected retail outlets in the city.
The material will then be collected, sorted, baled and sent to reprocessors who’ll turn it into a feed stock that can
then be used to make new products such as outdoor furniture, decking material, road bollards, and even more soft
plastics recycling bins.
Foodstuffs (NZ) Ltd Managing Director Steve Anderson says the programme has already been a resounding success in
Auckland and Hamilton, with a tonne of soft plastics currently being collected each week from New World and PAK’nSAVE
stores alone.
“Now Cantabrians have the opportunity to play their part in keeping these soft plastics out of the landfills in their
own part of the country,” says Anderson.
According to REDcycle, which operates the programme and tracks progress by each store, it seems New World and PAK’nSAVE
customers are the most proactive when it comes to recycling their plastics, with 80% of the soft plastics collected from
all participating outlets to date coming from a New World or PAK’nSAVE store.
“The response from our customers has been tremendous,” Anderson says. “It proves that if you give people the opportunity
to do the right thing, they won’t disappoint.”
Anderson says New World and PAK’nSAVE are proud to be working with The Packaging Forum and The RED Group, and other
retailers such as The Warehouse, in order to make the scheme a success.
“Retail is by its nature a very competitive business, but we mustn’t lose sight of the bigger picture. A healthy
environment is the foundation of a healthy economy, and when we all pull together, as we have done on this project, we
can achieve so much.”
Today’s South Island launch of the Soft Plastics Recycling Programme comes as Foodstuffs rolls out its award-winning
recyclable butchery trays, nationwide.
On Tuesday, the trays won the award for the country’s top waste minimisation initiative of 2016, at the Environment
Ministry’s Green Ribbon Awards.
The trays replace the non-recyclable polystyrene trays traditionally used by meat retailers, and are themselves made of
50% food grade recycled plastic.
“It’s estimated up to 80 million meat trays will be kept out of landfills every year,” Anderson says.
“That combined with the soft plastics recycling initiative all adds up to lot less waste polluting our environment,
something I think we can truly be proud of.”
ENDS