With increasing pressure on South Africans to reuse, recycle and reduce waste to landfill, Mpact Recycling managing director John Hunt debunks some of the myths surrounding recycling and urges citizens to take responsibility for managing their waste.
With increasing pressure on South Africans to reuse, recycle and reduce waste to landfill, Mpact Recycling managing director John Hunt debunks some of the myths surrounding recycling and urges citizens to take responsibility for managing their waste.
“There are many ways to make a difference. It may require a little extra effort, but the pay-off is a cleaner, healthier country for our children and generations to come. We all need to see the bigger picture and consider the possibly disastrous outcomes if we don’t make the effort,” he says.
Only white paper is recyclable.
Paper that is not suitable for recycling includes wax coated paper such as dog food bags, chip and sweet wrappers, boxes coated with wax or oil and grease.
Milk and juice cartons are not recyclable.
In addition to having a finite capacity, landfill sites are a major potential source of pollution in the form of toxins, leachate and greenhouse gases. The more South Africans can recycle, the less harmful chemicals and gases are released are released into the environment.
Hunt says Mpact Recycling supplies recovered paper to the Mpact Group’s paper mills and plastic to its Mpact Polymers plant. “The recycled paper is used to produce recycle-based cartonboard and containerboard. This is transformed into corrugated boxes, cartons for packaging of goods, cores for materials handling, pizza boxes and even cereal and toothpaste boxes.”
Mpact Polymers converts the recovered Pet into recycled PET, called Savuka, which is supplied to various partners in the beverages industry for the production of bottles.
In fact, according to the PETCO website, “PET bottles are made of one of the few polymers that can be recycled into the same form – a new beverage bottle – again and again.”
“This means PET is not a single-use plastic, such as that used for straws, which can end up in our oceans,” explains Hunt.
Hunt says the greatest benefits of the programme is that it creates informal employment for thousands of people in local communities. “Notably, Mpact Recycling has helped establish about 50 buy-back centres throughout Gauteng, which bring in more than 100,000 tonnes of recyclables every year.”
Hunt concludes by saying there is no good reason not to recycle. “With greater access to information than ever before, we are obliged to act now to conserve this planet’s natural resources and make it a safer and more sustainable place to live.”