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Mpact looking to grow SA recycling rate, expand into plastics

25th April 2014

By: Leandi Kolver

Creamer Media Deputy Editor

  

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JSE-listed paper and plastics packaging manufacturer Mpact’s recycling business, Mpact Recycling, was aiming to increase South Africa’s recycling rate by focusing on paper collection from individual households and rural areas, Mpact Recycling MD John Hunt told Engineering News in an interview.

He said South Africa’s paper recycling rate was currently 60%, which left the country with opportunity to improve, adding that besides the obvious environmental benefits, recycling had significant economic impact through job creation.

“The real challenge is how we get paper back from people’s [rubbish] bins to a paper mill where it is reused. The country also has [significant] rural areas that are sparsely populated and the big cost of recycling is moving that material,” he explained.

Hunt added that Mpact was, since October last year, working on a project in rural KwaZulu-Natal, where the company had contacted 29  municipalities in an attempt to set up the necessary infrastructure to regularly collect waste paper from these areas.

“There is a surprising amount of economic activity [in these areas] which means that people are buying [products] but throwing away the packaging, which means that there is a [recycling] opportunity,” he said.

Currently, Mpact has 57 people regularly collecting paper from these areas for the company.

Once this project is implemented successfully, Mpact will aim to implement similar solutions in southern KwaZulu-Natal and the northern areas of the former Transkei, in the Eastern Cape.

Hunt further said this targeted increased supply from rural areas would also enable Mpact to meet the supply requirements of its Felixton paper mill, in KwaZulu-Natal, which would – once fully upgraded in 2017 – require an extra 100 000 t/y of recycled paper.

“This drives us to grow the market. While our job is to collect [waste paper], we also need to track opportunities [relating to the supply of this material],” he explained.

Meanwhile, Hunt mentioned that the Waste Management Act was putting a lot of pressure on municipalities to improve the collection of waste at its source and, therefore, Mpact was working with municipalities to design recycling solutions.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Magazine Managing Editor

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