Posts Tagged ‘SIFT’

Themes & trends for 2011

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011 by Admin
Through Woods by Ben Petreath

Through the Woods by Ben Petreath

January is typically the month of reviewing the year that has been and thinking about the year to come. For some businesses it’s about their strategies and how they are tracking against budget and goal achievement (or creating new strategies), for individuals it’s about setting new goals and resolutions. So, last Friday I found myself thinking about how the year was looking for SIFT and then did some general Internet surfing (do we still surf the internet?) around the key themes and trends that others were discussing for 2011.

It seems like 2011 could be the best year yet for sustainable, low impact, healthy earth living. There are many more people consciously thinking about how they live, consume and waste. Most feel that you need to reevaluate, simplify and consume less first to then be able to live a life with more abundance (not stuff but good experiences – actually living life not living life through buying!). That less is better. This is positive.

It is definitely something we have talked about at SIFT. The need for less in order to be more. We have enough. There is a need to be consciously more grateful and really live a life aligned with our values. This will mean continuing to make changes to habits that have been ingrained in us for years (like changing from plastic to other non-disposable products, making your own skincare and homecare, growing your own food, spending more time in your community). It will still be a challenge for some but also super exciting to see a growing number of people thinking and changing. There is hope. Just imagine all of the wonderful solutions that have yet to be thought of and created.

Here are some of the other themes and trends for 2011 I found:

  • Slow Livingliving a mindful life, slow working, slow food and generally just taking the time to breathe and be human. More here.
  • Moving from ownership to accessibility (sharing more) – do we all need our own lawnmowers, power tools, tents (just examples) – why not share. Less  waste from this too! Like Zilok.
  • Co-working (many businesses working in the same space. With the technology we have all we need is a desk really). More here. This allows for more flexibility and nimbleness as an organisation.
  • Bikes. Yay bikes! More and more bikes. I think many would love Christchurch to be more bike friendly and there is a definite need in New Zealand for more access to European style urban bikes that many are loving in the UK, US and Europe. Like these. Some believe bikes will “save us”. They will keep us healthy, help us to be in our communities and reduce our carbon emissions massively. Frocks on Bikes is a good example of growing interest in this. Another favourite is Copenhagen Cycle Chic.
  • Creativity & Amateur Design. Like Etsy and Felt and DIY and MIY (make it yourself) at home. And the Self Repair Manifesto. This comes from self-responsibility for who we are and the impact we have as well as a desire to feel more fully each day in our lives.
  • Minimalism and maximalism. Separately and both at the same time. A move to reduce the amount of stuff you own  (like the 100 thing challenge) while at the same time living a life of more. More genuine, authentic life experiences. This is what is important not stuff. More here and here. Nick Potter from Re-Be writes more on this here and discusses this article on Less is More by the NZ Herald’s Rebecca Barry.
  • For textiles and clothing it will be about buying quality vintage or second hand clothing, refashioning and repurposing, ethical clothing and sustainable textiles as well as the trend to shopping from your own wardrobe. This will drastically reduce the amount of textile waste. And also more technology to recycle the clothing that we no longer want.
  • Consumer responsibility. Be conscious about what you buy and where from (ask questions about the manufacturing, packaging, waste disposal, environment and social impacts of that product’s production). Can you buy something else for equal or better performance and have a better outcome for those who made it and the environment? Also consumer responsibility is about demanding change from the producers, manufacturers, importers and retailers. Ask, ring, write, step up and take responsibility. Like – Can chip packets come in other packaging that can be recycled or composted? We know there are solutions to styrofoam meat trays so why aren’t more people using them (or not using them at all!)? And if cow’s milk can come in plastic (recyclable) containers why can’t other forms of milk (instead of the unrecyclable tetrapak)? Or why not go back to reusable glass milk bottles…at the supermarket! Also, don’t forget to support your local farmer’s market.
  • Producer Responsibility. On from consumer responsibility is producer responsibility (also called Product Stewardship Schemes – like the Agpac Plasback Programme we funded). Those companies taking responsibility for the full lifecycle of their products from manufacture to disposal will find this will add to their brand value and consumer trust – we need a lot more of this. All companies need to ask how can they lessen the impact (or create a positive impact) of the products that they produce? It is now no longer okay to not do this.
  • Cradle to cradle design. William McDonough and Michael Braungart wrote the book Cradle to Cradle a few years ago and some online were saying that this type of intelligent design will start to occur more this year.  William McDonough and Michael Braungart talk about intelligent design, that sustainability is just the minimum to start from, that waste=food and to just eliminate the concept of waste altogether (we like this one) and that what humans produce should be life supportive and “good for all children and all species for all time”. This is where we need to head to now. A good video on this here.
  • Collective Impact & Collaboration. The key to making the changes that need to be made for a healthy earth future is lots of little actions all connected, for lots of organisations of different types to come together with individuals and communities to achieve a single goal. We can’t do it on our own.
  • The widening of kindness and generosity. Moving from thinking about your small sphere of family and friends to how your actions impact your community, the communities and people of those who make what you buy, eco systems and other species. Moving from disconnect to a realisation that we are all connected (even if that link isn’t recognisable) and we are nature. What we do will ultimately impact on us.
  • Green Economics and total costing. There will be progress towards including all of the costs of each aspect of a products lifecyle from production to disposal and the environmental impacts in the cost of buying that product. For many products this will show that buying local is a lot cheaper than imported. This will help to develop green technologies and the ability for those working in unsustainable industries and jobs to move to sustainable jobs.
  • Redesign & Regeneration – It’s coming together but it looks like a redesigning of how our societies operate and what we value as communities and individuals is starting to emerge. Slowly. Very slowly. But there is a future. We will also start to place more emphasis on regeneration of the eco systems and species that have been depleted (many now lots) like sustainable fishing for fish for the future.

So, that is just some of what I found last week. Many of these elements we will need to foster, encourage and expand across all people in order to meet the challenges that we will face in the coming decades (two big ones – Climate Change and the Economy). SIFT will be involved in many elements from collaboration with other organisations, funding new R&D for new technologies to reduce waste through utilising recovered materials before they get dumped or creating new products that don’t get wasted. We will be keeping an eye on how things are trending across the globe.

*On the statement “We have enough” this is more about the resources we already have and should be using more efficiently and distributing more fairly.

Plasback story on TV3

Friday, January 7th, 2011 by Admin

Plasback TV3 Story

Yesterday TV3 interviewed me for a story on the Agpac Plasback Product Stewardship Scheme. Unfortunately, my bit and a mention of SIFT was not used in the story. But, it is still a good story from Jessica Rowe and great promotion for the Plasback Product Stewardship Scheme.

Story text.

Video.

1st Friday Favourites for 2011

Friday, January 7th, 2011 by Admin
Source: Re-Nest Post it Notes from Wood Waste

Source: Re-Nest Post it Notes from Wood Waste

Welcome to the first Friday Favourites for 2011. This is a quick round up of the intersting links and tid bits we have found online from across the world and at home about sustainability, waste, recycling and how to reduce the waste that you have. From what we found this week there is a lot going on in the world already. Here are our faves for some interesting reading this weekend:

Have a great waste free weekend.

Happy New Year!

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011 by Admin

Happy New Year for Website

We’re back and ready to go! Hope you had a great holiday and a happy new year.

Lots of plans at SIFT for 2011 but mostly we will keep on doing what we did last year: providing vital financial assistance to projects that reduce waste to landfill for Canterbury. Hopefully though there will be an increased awareness of the need to reduce  consumption first and foremost (and secondly to demand more environmentally healthy package i.e. less plastic). This, by far, is the quickest and easiest way to reduce the amount of waste that is produced.

Here is a quick look back at our favourite/most interesting blog posts from 2010:

Phew – what a year! Looking forward to seeing what 2011 will hold for us both locally, nationally and globally. Don’t forget to check out all the great links from the regular Friday Favourites and the Green Collar Job Q&A’s from earlier in the year.

Friday Favourites

Friday, December 10th, 2010 by Admin

Source: Re-Nest Green Bough eco Friendly plywood Christmas Tree

Source: Re-Nest Green Bough eco Friendly plywood Christmas Tree

Just had one of those great meetings where you know that with the right people real change for more sustainable (less wasteful) world can occur. Great way to end the week!

Here are our favourite links from around the world and home:

In case you had not already seen on our website, SIFT has released the 2009/10 Annual Report. If you would like to know what we have been up to in the past year, have a read and download it here.

•    Recycling and the life of a lip-stick tube
•    Keep excessive e-mail printers at bay!
•    Eco-friendly handmade Christmas decorations
•    Reusable fabric gift-wrap
•    Time to have an office clear out? NZ Post’s exciting Recyle Centre
•    Air New Zealand’s chronicle of New Zealand’s ecological history
•    Thrifty package wrapping

Have a fantastic waste free weekend.

The SIFT 2010 Christmas Tree

Monday, December 6th, 2010 by Admin
SIFT 2010 Christmas Tree

SIFT 2010 Christmas Tree

The 100% Recyclable and Compostable Christmas Tree

Here at the Sustainable Initiatives Fund office we enjoy getting in the Christmas spirit while implementing our core values of sustainability and minimisation of wastestreams. For these reasons, it was fitting for our office Christmas tree to be one which embodies the three R’s, Reduce, Reuse and Recycle.

The ‘tree’ is made from bamboo shoots and assembled with unbleached twine.  We created our own decorations by using outdated business flyers: creating stars, Christmas chain and even a little angel. The decorations were held together and hung with cotton and we added small torn calico bows and finished the look off with a tree-topping star made from old office file dividers. Through creativity we have made a 100% recyclable and compostable* Christmas tree. The finishing product was so good that it will be the face of SIFT’s 2010 Christmas card!

Let us know how you are reducing your waste this Christmas.


				

Friday Favourites

Friday, November 19th, 2010 by Admin
Sustainable Spoon Mug Wall via Re-Nest

Sustainable Spoon Mug Wall via Re-Nest

It is a lovely 26 degrees (C) in the garden city today and no doubt the rest of Canterbury will be enjoying the lovely weather as well. Here are a few tid bits from home and abroad to tide you over till Monday.

Have a great waste free weekend (start making Christmas presents from things around the home, second hand goods or baking).

Comspec

Tuesday, November 9th, 2010 by Admin
Milk bottles being processed at Comspec

Milk bottles being processed at Comspec

At SIFT we like to have ongoing relationships with those people that we have funded or given some financial assistance to especially during the course of the project with regular meetings and catch ups (especially if there are milestones associated with the project). I visited the lovely and hard working team of Robert & Stephanie Fowler of Comspec, in Hornby, this morning to catch up on how they going with recycling the majority of the South Island’s plastic milk bottles and to just say hi. To quote Martha Stewart what they are doing is “a good thing”.

You can read more of the good work that they are doing and how SIFT are helping them to do it here.

Comspec website.

WasteMinz Conference 2010 Photos

Wednesday, November 3rd, 2010 by Admin
Pelletised recycling plastics from Mastagard

Pelletised recycling plastics from Mastagard

It has taken a bit of time to get around to organising the photos I took from the WasteMinz Conference a few weeks ago but they are all now uploaded on the SIFT Flickr site.

Featured organisations  include:

SuloTalbot

Sulo Talbot Bin Man

Sulo Talbot Bin Man

Mastagard

Mastagard Stand

Mastagard Stand

Owens-Illinois

Owens Illinois stand

Owens Illinois stand

Villa Maria Winery

Villa Maria Winery Mangere

Villa Maria Winery Mangere

Ministry for the Environment

MfE Stand

MfE Stand

and of course WasteMinz who put on an excellent, highly informative and productive conference. Next year it will be in Rotorua and if this year is anything to go by will be just as important to those in or associated with the waste and recovering materials industries.

Councils asked for big solutions by MfE

Wednesday, October 27th, 2010 by Admin
Kate Valley Landfill, North Canterbury

Kate Valley Landfill, North Canterbury

One of the big issues or themes during the WasteMinz conference was how councils and other Territorial Authorities are to use their share of the waste disposal levies collected by the Ministry for the Environment. The levies collected have been put into a new fund called the Waste Minimisation Fund. Half of the funds collected go to councils “on a per head of population basis” to help them with their waste mangement and minimisation plans (WMMP) and the other half to individuals, businesses and other organisations that have projects that meet the WMF criteria (some of the fund will also pay administration costs).

To date councils across New Zealand have received approx $3 million each quarter this year (with another about to paid). That’s a total of approx $12 million that, states Director of Operations for the Ministry for the Environment Martyn Pinkard, is to be used for solutions that are innovative, wide reaching within the community and have a direct impact on reducing the amount of waste that goes to landfill.

To July 2010 the district councils in Canterbury have received a total of $1.2 million with Christchurch City Council taking the largest share due to the largest population being in their jurisdiction ($815,000).

The Sustainable Initiatives Fund Trust can play a key role in helping local Canterbury territorial authorities to come up with and implement solutions that are both attractive and appropriate to the Ministry for the Environment and it’s aims in Waste Minimisation. Collaboration and industry and council integration will be vital in the success of projects that are to reduce waste to landfill and recover and use our resources more efficiently. Local solutions tailored to each community that have a long term effect will also be important.

Calling all Canterbury Territorial Authorities

Any district council in Canterbury that has a project or idea for a project that they could collaborate or co-fund with SIFT on can give us a call to discuss the possible solutions. If the project meets our criteria and the SIFT board give it the go ahead then our links, networks, ideas and possible funding could help to bring the project to fruition. Collaboration within the waste and sustainability fields are key to developing a sustainable future for Canterbury.

More information on payments to individual territorial authorities.

Downloadable maps of where the waste disposal sites are in New Zealand can be found here.

**Image by SIFT from WasteMinz Conference field trip 2009