Plastic conversion rates stagnate
The 2014 results just released have shown that a total of 1 400 000 tonnes of plastics from domestic production and imported materials were converted in South Africa in 2014. Hanekom says that “although this is the same total as was reported for 2013, the conversion rates for certain types of plastics have increased and others decreased in tonnages owing to the impact of light-weighting plastics packaging, which had a marked increase on South Africa’s consumption rate.Increase in amount of plastic diverted from landfill
Earlier last year, the South African plastics industry had set itself the aspirational target of diverting plastic from the country’s landfill sites by the year 2030, by adopting a new sustainability objective entitled, ‘Zero plastics to landfill by 2030’. The impact and influence that this strategic direction had on the recycling industry could be seen in the 2013-2014 results:• A total of 1 400 000 tonnes of plastics from domestic production and imported materials were converted in South Africa in 2014. This is the same total as 2013 although some materials have increased and others decreased in tonnages.
• 315 600 tonnes of plastics (22.5%) were diverted from landfill in 2014. This is an increase of 9% from 2013. • Of the 315 600 tonnes of plastics diverted from landfill, 284 520 tonnes (90.2%) were mechanically recycled in South Africa and 31 087 tonnes (9.8%) were exported for recycling elsewhere. The proportion of plastics recycled in South Africa has decreased from 97.6% in 2009 to 90.2% in 2014. The tonnages exported from South Africa are causing some concerns amongst the domestic plastics recyclers. • Post-consumer materials still provide the most recyclables and 62.7% of all materials recycled originated from post-consumer sources. A further 17.2% originated from post-industrial sources. • The formal employment provided by plastics recycling has increased with 34 % to 6 037 workers. Informal employment has increased to 47 420, bringing the total number of jobs sustained through plastics recycling to 53 457 (an increase of 11.4 % since 2013.) • The majority of plastics that were recycled in South Africa continue to be used locally to manufacture new products, mainly films (packaging, building and industrial) and pipes. “We have proved that plastics can effectively be recycled many times over into new products. South Africa is being recognized as one of the world leaders when it comes to ‘closing the loop’, or recycling products back into their original form. Whilst our first choice will always be to recycle plastics for re-use, we are investigating waste-to-energy recovery options for difficult to recycle or end-of-life plastics that could provide a viable answer to our country’s current electricity crisis, save natural resources and support our objectives of saving landfill space, reducing litter, saving energy and reducing CO2 emissions,” Hanekom concludes.