The 2016 festive season is well under way, albeit toned down somewhat from its usual excesses due to the current economic environment. It is however, still the perfect time to pay greater attention to the way we use the planet’s natural resources. It is a time that people waste more, whether its disposable gift-wrap paper, Christmas cards, gift packaging, decorations on every wall, through to excessive consumption.
Reducing, re-using or recycling all that Christmas packaging can make an enormous difference to the environment, says Donna Noble, Mpact communications manager. Mpact Recycling - the leading paper and now PET plastic recyclers in the country. According to the Paper Recycling Association of South Africa (PRASA) one tonne of recycled paper can save up to three cubic metres of landfill space. Last year, 1.2 million tonnes of paper and board was recycled, which was subsequently converted into new paper products. “That volume of paper would have occupied 3.6 million cubic metres of landfill space, or 1,435 Olympic-sized swimming pools!”
Come 27 December, it’s as if people instinctively realise they need a detox. It’s also a time when many people prepare for the New Year by taking on an annual spring clean.
Donna Noble, Mpact communications manager, offers some festive season recycling tips. Mpact Recycling is the leading paper and now PET plastic recyclers in the country.
“The summer holidays and festive season are a time for family and friends, and the perfect opportunity to remind our loved ones to remain mindful of reducing their waste. Remember to recycle your wrapping paper, gift packaging, cardboard, cereal boxes, office paper and newspaper, milk and juice cartons, and plastic beverage bottles. A lot of what we call rubbish is actually recyclable.”
While Mpact only recycles the above products themselves, the following materials can still be separated and placed out for recycling: aluminium foil and trays; beverage cans; plastic toys and even outdoor furniture - and given to the collectors.
“What better way to have fun and celebrate the season than by making your own festive wrapping paper, decorations and gifts? Before buying anything and later disposing of it, try reuse, up-cycle or DIY with materials you already have on hand:
If you must purchase new decorations, then choose sturdy options that will last more than one festive season. You can also stimulate interest by sharing and swapping decorations with friends and family to try out a new look each year.
Encourage friends and family to separate out their recyclables. Separating your paper, plastic, glass and cans at source enables a far greater percentage to be recycled. This is because; when they are mixed with normal waste they can become contaminated and unusable.
“Please remember that your items such as cold drink bottles are not trash. They are a livelihood for many thousands of collectors, and an essential raw material to improving sustainable plastic manufacturing. We therefore encourage you to support recycling wherever possible by separating recyclable materials from other waste that might contaminate it. Doing your bit at home can make all the difference to job creation and protecting the environment,” says Noble.
Recycling has become easier than ever. Many suburban areas are today covered by a kerbside collection service for paper, while collectors in many areas also gather plastic bottles and other forms of plastic. The collectors then sell their recyclables to their closest drop off site such as any of the over 40 buy-back centres supported by Mpact in Gauteng alone.
“The post-Christmas clean up offers a big opportunity to recycle all that filing, and cleaning out cupboards and storerooms to make space for the New Year. This exercise often generates huge amounts of waste paper for recycling.”
She suggests confronting this often-daunting task carefully:
Items that can be recycled by Mpact Recycling in their paper banks and through their kerbside programme include paper, newspapers, magazines, milk and juice cartons, telephone directories, envelopes, egg boxes, cereal boxes etc.
“With one eye on our environment and the other on festive family fun, we can all have a very merry Christmas and a happy New Year in the knowledge that our planet won’t be suffering the hangover afterwards,” concludes Noble.
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