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Posts Tagged ‘recycle’
Monday, November 23rd, 2009 by Admin
Crop packaging manufacturer Agpac is leading the way on a product stewardship scheme that recycles the very crop packaging they manufacturer. You can read more about them here on an old blog post. Baleage wrap is used to wrap bales of hay and other grasses and instead of farmers burning or burying the plastic or leaving it to blow around the farm they can now put it in a handy Agpac collection bin (which also decreases the risk of contamination) and it is then recycled.
Agpac recently opened a new baler with the help of Minister for the Environment Hon. Dr. Nick Smith who is quoted as saying “These initiatives are part of the future for New Zealand’s most important industry. Companies are expected to take responsibility for the full life of their products not just manufacture and sales. This includes removing waste at the end of the product’s life-cycle. Agpac is taking a lead in developing this broader view.”
He also went on to say “New Zealand’s agriculture exports are coming under increasing scrutiny regarding their sustainabiltiy and environmental impact. Currently 10 to 20 percent of agriculture plastics are being recycled and we need to increase this to 100%”.
This new baler has the ability to be transported across the South Island where it can bale up used plastic baleage wrap and sileage pit covers at the farm making it easier for farmers to be apart of the scheme. Agpac’s Chris Hartshorne states that “Product Stewardship is a partnership that includes us as the distributor, our customers, the recycling industry and the reprocessors who create new products from the recycled materials.” This is exactly where all businesses and industries need to be moving to in order to create a sustainable future for New Zealand and its products.
And as Mastagard’s Sebastian Stapleton said in the press release for the new baler farmers need to start looking at where their old products are being sent to for recycling – “There is significant risk that waste plastic shipped to Asia will be processed in environmentally reckless and inhumane conditions”.
As well as a new baler Agpac have recently entered into a new agreement with plastics recycler Mastagard who will recycled the used baleage wrap here in Christchurch. Mastagard recently opened a $5 million wash and plastics recycling plant in Sockburn, which you can read about here. They will also be able to take the agrichemicals plastic containers.
All Agpac and Mastergard need now is for more farmers to be apart of the scheme.
 The Hon. Dr. Nick Smith with new Agpac baler
Tags: agpac, agrichemicals, baleage wrap, diverting waste from landfill, Mastagard, plastic, plastic wrap, producer responsibility, product stewardship, recycle, recycling, recycling projects, SIFT, sileage, waste Posted in Events, SIFT Projects, Waste Management | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 17th, 2009 by Admin
Only 3.5 days to go to enter the e-waste competition so get your entry in now. We have two iPod Nanos as the prizes and you can enter online here.
We have already had some great entries but would love to get some more ideas.
Tags: competition, consumption, diverting waste from landfill, ewaste, recycle, reduce, reuse, SIFT Posted in SIFT Projects, Waste Management | No Comments »
Tuesday, November 10th, 2009 by Admin
 No Impact Man - Colin Beavan
No Impact Man: The Adventures of a Guilty Liberal who Attempts to Save the Planet and the Discoveries he Makes About Himself and Our Way of Life in the Process by Colin Beavan.
After spending the past couple of years following No Impact Man’s (Colin Beavan) blog I was looking forward to reading his book on the year he spent (with his wife and child) living with no impact on the environment. If Colin Beavan and his family can make profound, lasting, positive environmental changes to their lifestyle in order to tackle climate change while living in a ninth floor apartment in the middle of Manhattan then I can certainly make some changes to my life (while I live in the much easier NZ suburbia – where I can grow my own vegetables for instance!).
This book (and the blog) is now a favourite. Beavan discusses what he has done (and is still doing) to live a lower impact life and the decision-making/thought processes he has while doing it. From zero waste to zero carbon transportation to eating only local food from the farmers market to not buying anything new to taking a reusable jar (for coffee) and taking napkins with him to switching off the electricity this book has many ideas (and ideals) we can take away to improve our lives to improve the health of the environment.
Not only does Colin Beavan give the facts of the why and the how but also discusses the social, cultural, political and global issues surrounding climate change and global warming (such as consumption and poverty). Beavan questions why we are all living the way we do and why we have not questioned it before. A cultural shift is required in order to solve the problem and Colin Beavan delved deeply into that new culture and came out the other side with a healthier body, family, life and a much lowered impact on the environment.
It is a must read for anyone who has made the decision to try to make a difference. I ordered mine from the library and had to wait a few weeks due to the number of other people wanting to read it but that’s a good thing. The more people who read it the better. It is an emotive and compelling read that will make you think. But, it also reminds you that you are human and we can make a difference, together (while having fun and laughing – lots of smiles from this book too).
Here’s the NoImpactMan blog and here’s the recently set up NoImpactProject which will help more people to live a no impact life. And hopefully in NZ we will see it soon but there is also a documentary about Colin Beavan’s No Impact Man year – here’s a preview.
Courage, conviction, strength, integrity, heart (and soul), conscious living and determination (with fun thrown in). This is No Impact Man and this is what we all need to hold true to in order to live differently for a better earth. Thank you Colin Beavan. I think I will read the book again!
Change must start today.
Tags: climate change, Colin Beavan, conscious living, consumption, environment, Manhattan, No Impact Man, recycle, reduce, reuse, sustainable living, zero waste Posted in Other Sustainable Initiatives, Pratical Action, Sustainability in Action | No Comments »
Thursday, November 5th, 2009 by Admin
This little old cell phone will not end up in the Kate Valley Landfill. We are sending it to Vodafone so it can end up with an entrepreneur (who we love to help) in a developing country, through the Enable Community organisation . If it is still okay to be used some lucky person will be able to utilise the technology for their new business. If not, the parts will be recovered and reused in other products. Hoorah for a solution.
 This piece of e-waste will not end up in Landfill
Tags: cell phone, community, consumption, diverting waste from landfill, e-waste, enable community, entrepreneur, recycle, reuse, SIFT, vodafone Posted in SIFT, Sustainability in Action, Waste Management | No Comments »
Wednesday, November 4th, 2009 by Admin
 Source: Flickr Walter Parenteau
This week’s practical action is to reduce the amount of plastic you put in the landfill bin. Nationally, the amount of plastic that goes to landfill is 8% of the total waste to landfill (MfE, 2007-2008) and for Christchurch this number is 10%. Plastic is one of the greatest inventions of the 20th century; it helps keep food fresh so it can reach its destination, it can be flexible and rigid so it can be used for a multiple of products and uses (from plastic bags to guttering) and it has a long life but, there is a lot of it, it takes hundreds of years to break down and it is made from petroleum, which we all know is a finite resource. There are also studies suggesting plastic is harmful to human health as it can leach toxins into our food and drink.
Here are some ideas on how you can reduce plastic waste:
- Take you own cotton, hemp or cloth (so they can decompose when you no longer need them) bags to the supermarket (and to the mall) – this includes little bags for fruit and vege (although if you do end up with stash of those little plastic bags used for fruit and vege most are a number two so if you put them all together in one bag they can go in the recycling bin). Not reusable bags made of plastic though as these may take just as long to degrade in landfill as traditional plastic bags.
- Make or buy reusable cloth lunch bags instead of using plastic sandwich bags or ziplock bags. (Here is a great little tutorial for reusable snack bags and here is a lovely one for lunch bags ). Or these sandwich bags from EcoStore.
- Make your own baking, snacks, sweets, breads, pastry and even pasta (if your keen) and that will reduce the amount of packaging you bring home (takes a bit more planning though!).
- Store home baking in old biscuit tins instead of plastic. These can be painted to go with your home decor or just keep the vintage design (you can find these on TradeMe or through second hand stores).
- Buy vintage glass storage containers for storing food in the fridge.
- Take takeaway containers back to your favourite takeaway restaurant for reuse.
- For all the plastic you do have in your house most can be recycled. Check here for more information from the Christchurch City Council on what can go in your recycle bin. Pretty much anything labelled 1-7 on the bottom can go in the yellow recycling bin.
- As blogged about previously take your old plastic plant pots back to the garden centre for reuse and see if they will give a discount on your next purchase.
- Instead of using plastic bags for your kitchen bin liner use newspaper like this. Or nothing at all as what goes to landfill will be all the dry waste (organics to the garden, recycling to well the recycling bin) and if the bin gets dirty give it a quick clean with hot soapy water once a week.
- Buy fruit and vege from local farmers market where there is usually a lot less packaging than supermarkets.
- Buy clothes and household goods from TradeMe or through freecycle.
- Buy food in bulk.
- Buy meat from your local butcher to avoid unrecyclable styrofoam meat trays (at least 25 million go to landfill each year – just in Christchurch).
- Use pencils instead of plastic pens – more info here. And use refillable pens and highlighters.
- Make your own skincare, haircare and home cleaning products or buy a product like Dr Bronners which is organic and has over 18 different uses.
- Use business cards that don’t have a laminate cover.
- Reuse plastic office stationery as many times as possible before sending it to landfill.
- Use reusable mugs for your favourite coffee and buy an ECOtanka for water.
- Buy second hand furniture for your home or office.
- Work with your business to ensure all plastic is recycled properly by your waste contractor.
- Buy music from iTunes rather than buying CDs.
- Looking for picnic ware for the summer then again try vintage stores, which will sometimes have full picnic sets from the fifties or lots of plastic cups and plastic that with a quick wash are good as new.
- If you want to use packaging and containers made from PLAs (Polylatic Acid) such as corn starch ensure they are certified.
- Consciously consume – before you buy an item made of plastic think about an item you already have that could do the job or look for a similar product made out of materials that are compostable.
Keep an eye on the plastic that you bring into your house and question whether something else could have been used or you could have purchased the item differently to avoid the plastic. In some cases plastic waste will be inevitable as plastics is such a large part of our lives but we can live with less. These ideas are just the tip of the iceberg for changing to a more sustainable life – the beginning is to recognise what can be changed and do what you can even if it is just one change a week.
Coming up – start thinking about the waste from Christmas – how can this be reduced?
Plus, if you have any other ideas on how to reduce plastic waste we would love to hear from you.
Tags: Christmas, coffee, consumption, diverting waste from landfill, Dr Bronners, EcoStore, farmers, food, haircare, home cleaning, iTunes, landfill, market, meat trays, packaging, pencils, pens, plastic, plastics, recycle, skincare, stationery, styrofoam, supermarket, waste, water Posted in Sustainability in Action | No Comments »
Monday, November 2nd, 2009 by Admin
 Source: Flickr: Rvibek
Millions of computers, cell phones, cameras, televisions, iPods and other electronic devices are bought each year and the number is growing. When they are no longer wanted most end up in landfills with over 80,000 tonnes of electronic waste (“e-waste”) being sent to landfills annually.
E-waste contains toxic materials that can leach out of landfills causing environmental pollution and damage. Other materials such as steel and copper wiring can be recovered and be reused.
Because of the large amounts of hazardous e-waste going to landfill we decided to ask the community for new ideas on how we can reduce the large amount of hazardous e-waste that is ending up in New Zealand landfills (where it will sit for hundreds of years). Do you have any ideas?
The SIFT e-waste competition has two main categories:
- The most sustainable and commercially viable idea, or
- The most creative and artistic idea (we are looking for some e-waste art made out of personal
 Source: Flickr: CP
entertainment equipment for our Green Boardroom).
Please fill in the form on the e-waste Competition page of our website and if you are entering the artistic/creative category please send the e-waste art to Unit 17, 212 Antigua Street, Christchurch.
The competition is open to all Cantabrians.
Competition closes Friday 20 November, 2009.
Prizes
The winners will receive an iPod Nano each and will be notified Wednesday 2 December, 2009 and listed on the SIFT website Friday 4 December, 2009.
More information and full terms and conditions can also be found on our website.
Tags: cameras, cell phones, community, computers, consumption, diverting waste from landfill, e-waste, hazardous waste, iPods, landfill, plastics, recycle, reduce, televisions, Waste Management Posted in SIFT Projects, Sustainability in Action, Waste Management | No Comments »
Monday, November 2nd, 2009 by Admin
 Paul Ryan with fellow competition winner Jo Wynne
Interview with Jo Wynne – the winner of the most artistic/creative category of our Styrofoam Tray recycling competition back in September.
What do you do to live more sustainably (with a low impact) in your life?
Recycle – love the Christchurch bin system and challenge myself to keep the red lid bin empty. Grow vegetables. Shop at the Op shop for clothes which I often redesign – for example I’m opening some silk scarves to make a crazy patchwork jacket.
How do you live more sustainably in your work?
I’m retired but in my last job I used public transport and walked to work and reduced paper use.
What do you think is the biggest environmental issue we need to deal with in Christchurch/New Zealand?
Water allocation and quality, and transport.
What makes you smile?
Sun, flowers, babies and The Conchords
What is your biggest pet peeve?
Any negative judgement based on difference
What is your favourite colour and why?
Blue: we have amazing skies – I love to look at different cloud shapes against the blue background. Also I love the blue-green colour of some rivers and lakes – for example Hokitika Gorge.
Do you have a favourite place in the world? Describe why?
Tauranga Bay and any part of the West Coast coastline that has the wild sea crashing on the rocks and huge sea spray. This comes from living on the Coast as a child.
What’s your connection to Sift?
I have an ongoing interest in sustainability but only came in contact with Sift through winning the Creative section of the recent competition what to do with non- recyclable styrofoam meat plates.
Do you remember your favourite teacher and why they were your favourite?
My favourite teacher was enthusiastic, funny and liked me.
What do you want to leave behind?
Good memories
What do you think the future will bring?
More awareness of the interconnectedness of all life.
Who is someone you really admire and why?
Nelson Mandela for his apparent lack of bitterness, anger, revenge for the unjust treatment against himself and the blacks of South Africa.
What is happening outside your window right now?
Flowers and new leaves opening by the minute, weekend walkers and dogs.
What is your favourite breakfast?
Homemade muesli with raw fruit – kiwi, orange , apple, orange and Greek yoghurt
What is the best piece of advice you can give us?
It feels as though you are on the right track by using interesting fun ways to get across a serious message and lead people to rethink their lives. So do keep on doing the same thing and at the same time find more ways to reach even more people.
Tags: blue skies, coast, community, competition, diverting waste from landfill, Green Collar Jobs, meat trays, nelson mandela, recycle, recycling, recycling projects, styrofoam, waste Posted in SIFT, SIFT Projects | 1 Comment »
Thursday, October 29th, 2009 by Admin
 Source: Flickr Simon Cox
The practical waste reduction action for this week is to print two to a page and double sided (sounds like a hoedown!)…and only print when you need to. Printing two sheets to a page (which is still readable) instantly halves the amount of printing and then printing double sided will halve it again. If two to a page is too small stick with double sided and if you have a printer that can’t do this look to upgrade to one that can. The next step is to print on 100% recycled paper and reuse any paper printed on one side. At SIFT we are conscious about printing and paper use and only print when we really need to.
The Ministry for Agriculture and Forestry Annual Pulp, Paper and Production statistics state that in the year to March 31 2009 New Zealand consumed 945, 499 tonnes of paper which is 221kg per person.
In Christchurch alone we sent 53,337 tonnes (of paper and card) to Kate Valley Landfill in the year to June 2009.
Here is a lovely way to recycle paper we found while looking through Flickr. Haru’s Paper Celebration!s makes some lovely wreaths which you can check out here.
 Source: Flickr Haru's Paper Celebration!s
Tags: CCC, consumption, diverting waste from landfill, environmental sustainability, MAF, paper, recycle, reduce, waste, Waste Management Posted in Sustainability in Action, Waste Management | No Comments »
Thursday, October 22nd, 2009 by Admin
 wasteminz
Here are Linda’s top 14 highlights (in no particular order) from last week’s WasteMinz conference held here in Christchurch. There were four days of workshops, site visits and networking – a must for anyone involved in the waste industry.
- Lisa Smith – The Thinker – ground breaking thinking
- Tyres – discussed the models and the realities of recycling tyres in New Zealand
- Louisa Palmer – the future of recycling and the bottle bank on her trade stand
- Sulo Talbot & SIFT’s basketball challenge at the Smart environmental recycling stand – prizes galore…business card holders, wine and even a cafe table and chair set up for grabs – well done to both who received a high score on Day 2 with 96 points in 45 seconds! Great conversations and lots of fun. Apparently it even generated a business idea, but shhh mum’s the word!
- FriendlyPak/Agpac – biodegradable products
- Presentation by Mark Inglis – innovation in R&D which is much needed in NZ, “in the last 100 years we have learnt more than in the past 20,000 years – what are we going to learn in the next 10 years?”, communication , connections and being proactive about what you need to do for the future. Mark also talked about how people need to become more socially responsible and businesses need to lead the way as change makers. “We need to be optimists as opposed to optimalists.”
- Christian Noble – debunking the waste to energy myth – experiences from Denmark so we can broaden our knowledge
- Presentation by Martyn Pinckard, Director of Operations from MfE
- E-Waste – Kumar Radharkrishnan, SIMS recycling services, APAC – what’s being recycled and is there a model for Canterbury? Can Canterbury lead the way for e-waste as well?
- Visit to Kate Valley Landfill – surprised the slick operation and cleanliness.
- Product Stewardship – A commercial study – turning nappies into compost
- The formal dinner at the Christchurch Airforce museum – just an awesome location…
- Sulo Talbot’s Worms on Wheels product – great idea
- Trade Commission of Denmark – forever helpful in connecting NZ and Denmark
Photos of the highlights will be up next week.
Tags: community, diverting waste from landfill, e-waste, environmental sustainability, Green Collar Jobs, linda norris, plastics, recycle, SIFT, Waste Management Posted in Events | 1 Comment »
Thursday, October 15th, 2009 by Admin
 Source: enniomorry11 Flickr
We are now fully into Spring and many people will be getting their vegetable beds and new plants into their gardens. Instead of developing piles of different sized plant pots in your back shed or garage after taking out the plants or seedlings return them to the garden centre you bought them from.
On a recent trip to Southern Woods I noticed that they were now taking back their plastic plant pots for a small discount on your next purchase. This is a great way to reduce your plastic waste and ensure that the pots get reused over and over. And will also lessen the demand for the production of new pots which will reduce the environmental impact of pot manufacturing (energy, resources and waste).
Check with your local garden centre if they have pot take back/recycling scheme (even if they won’t give a discount it is still worth returning them) – just make sure you take back the plant pots that originally came from that garden centre and they are clean and not chipped or broken in anyway.
 Source: willdobson Flickr
If you have pots that you can’t take back re-use them in the garden to raise seedlings such as tomatoes, chillies, squash and other plants before planting them in the garden.
With gardening (particularly growing vegetables) becoming more popular there will be a growing number of pots being manufactured and wasted. Garden waste in this form will become more of an issue so it is worth thinking ahead before buying – maybe sow seeds instead for veges.
Reduce then reuse then recycle.
Tags: consumption, diverting waste from landfill, environmental sustainability, gardening, plant pots, plastics, recycle, waste Posted in Sustainability in Action, Waste Management | No Comments »
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