A new recycling pilot project between producer responsibility organisation Petco and the South African National Parks (SANParks) aims to cut waste and boost recycling efforts at the Kruger National Park. The project implements an animal-proof, three-bin recycling system at the popular Tshokwane picnic site near Skukuza, in the southern Marula region of the park.
An animal-proof, three-bin recycling system aims to encourage visitors to recycle at the Kruger National Park. Image supplied.
An asset to nature
Day visitors account for over 70% of the Kruger National Park’s gate traffic, and use at least one picnic site on their travels. These sites are a hotspot for improving waste management within the park, said SANParks’ general manager for sustainable development and management, Dr Danny Govender. She said the bins were colour-coded and labelled for ease of use: green for recyclable packaging, grey for non-recyclable waste, and brown for compostable materials such as food waste. With the park’s waste currently manually separated at 10 waste sites, Govender said this leads to soiled recyclables, inefficient recovery, and lost opportunities for compostable materials. “Strong separation-at-source partnerships with organisations like Petco are key in ensuring that these valuable resources are circulated back into the economy,” she said. Petco CEO Telly Chauke said the Kruger National Park was one of South Africa’s key natural assets and that it was vital to support the park on its journey to more sustainable waste management and to help build a circular economy for the country. “If we can get the public helping us to separate waste at source – keeping compostables and non-recyclables out of the recycling stream, then those recyclables will be uncontaminated, have a much higher value for both collectors and recyclers, and can be turned into something new and useful.”SANParks’ circular economy era
Chauke said Petco was proud to help action this practical and scalable, long-term solution that could help SANParks move toward a circular economy. “South Africa has put a legislative framework in place to ensure that producers take responsibility for their packaging material, even after their product leaves a consumer’s hands.“Our role is to ensure that the packaging our members, who include some of the country’s major retailers and brand owners, have placed on the market is collected for recycling.
“That’s why the sponsorship of waste separation and recycling equipment on the ground in high-traffic public spaces, especially a pristine environment like the Kruger, is such a priority for Petco,” explained Chauke.