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Wellington residents are recycling less says a city report

Wednesday, 26 September 2018

Wellington residents are recycling less and sending more to landfill. 

Over the last five years recycling rates have decreased, the Wellington City Council's draft annual report says.  

Councillor Iona Pannett said people were finding recycling complicated, and there needed to be better education. 

'People are getting wiser about recycling, in saying that, understanding it can be a horribly confusing thing.' 

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Pannett wanted improved labelling on plastic packaging to help people recycle.

 Market changes meant recycling advice was often changing.  People were growing more sceptical about what items could be recycled, which could have  lowered the overall recycling.

The report noted a significant increase in substances like asbestos and other hazardous materials sent to landfill.  

'This waste is the result of the significant construction and demolition work that has been going on around Wellington.' 

Pannett said there needed to be council investment in a 'resource park' – a plant which could salvage construction waste for better use. 

Dumping construction waste was easy and inexpensive, which was why the council was advocating for an increased  Waste Disposal Levy to encourage people to seek other options.

If the levy applied to all landfills, not just the class one landfills, it would encourage people to seek recycling options to save money, she said. 

Wellington City Councillor Iona Pannett says  there needs to be council investment in a
Wellington City Councillor Iona Pannett says there needs to be council investment in a 'resource park'.

Waste Management Institute New Zealand chief executive Paul Evans said better construction and demolition recycling relied on investment in recycling infrastructure.  

 An increased levy could encourage people to recycle materials, as it would cost them more to take it to landfills. 

AUT Senior Lecturer Dr Jeff Seadon said New Zealand was still a long way from diverting more construction waste from landfills. 

Councils could improve recycling schemes, but many would not have the money.

'The average house build is three to four cubic metre skips, and that's just for a house build,' he said.

A Ministry for the Environment spokeswoman said just 11 per cent of New Zealand's more than 400 landfills were subject to the Waste Disposal Levy, which required them to submit waste quantity information to the Ministry.

This meant the ministry did not know  how much construction waste arrived at landfills.

Total kerbside recycling collected (kilograms per person) 

2017-18 - 52.1 kg

Recycling bags on Daniell St, Newtown.
Recycling bags on Daniell St, Newtown.

2016-17 - 53.8 kg 

2015-16 - 54.6 kg 

Total waste to the landfill (kilograms per person) 

2017-18 - 478 kg 

2016-17 - 447 kg 

2015-16 - 411 kg