The scheme's first bin appeared outside Countdown at Trafalgar Square. Photo / Bevan Conley
Whanganui now has a soft plastics recycling option, with a bin appearing outside Woolworths (formerly Countdown) at Trafalgar Square.
It is part of the Soft Plastic Recycling Scheme run by The Packaging Forum - a membership organisation that works on sustainable solutions for packaging.
Scheme manager Lyn Mayes said she was delighted to get it up and running in Whanganui.
“Judging from our Facebook page and emails, a lot of people there have been waiting for this so we’re expecting lots of plastic to be coming through.
“Adding drop-off points in Whanganui means we’re up to 86 per cent of the [country’s] population having access to soft plastic recycling.”
Examples of soft plastics are lolly and chocolate wrappers, chip packets and bread bags - “anything made of soft plastic which can be scrunched into a ball”.
Two hundred companies have signed up to the scheme, including Woolworths, The Warehouse, Griffin’s and Silver Fern Farms, and membership has tripled in three years.
Whanganui businesses can also become members.
“The scheme is 100 per cent funded by industry - by our members. They pay into it and the scheme pays for the collection and bailing,” Mayes said.
“We also pay a fee to our processors because one of the issues that soft plastics has, not just here but around the world, is that there’s no value in it.
“That incentivises them to take more of our plastics so we can increase what we’re collecting. It’s a win-win for us.”
The official launch of the Whanganui scheme is on April 12 at The Warehouse.
Mike Tweed is an assistant news director and multimedia journalist at the Whanganui Chronicle. Since starting in March 2020, he has dabbled in everything from sport to music. At present his focus is local government, primarily the Whanganui District Council.