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Do your part for recycling this week

Since 2003, the SA paper industry has diverted more than 20 million tons of paper and packaging from landfill.

In honour of Clean-Up and Recycle Week 2022, Fibre Circle, the producer responsibility organisation for the paper and paper packaging sector, calls on businesses and consumers to practise better separation at source and turn ‘trash into treasure’.

In 2021, South Africans helped to recycle 1.15 million tons of paper and paper packaging. To put this figure into perspective, the bales of paper recovered in 2021 would stretch a distance of 1 357km if the bales were laid end to end. That’s from Johannesburg to Cape Town!

While South Africa has a thriving paper recycling economy, much more can be done at a household, school and business level to turn waste into wealth, especially for informal waste collectors and small recycling businesses.

Recyclables have a value for the collectors, which is monetary. For paper, packaging and tissue manufacturers, old paper products are the ingredients for new products.

There are many products that we touch or use every day that needs to stay out of the rubbish bin and be kept separate for recycling. This is called separation-at-source, by keeping paper and paper packaging clean and dry, we maximise its potential for reuse and divert it from landfills.

Separation-at-source starts with the small act of putting a paper-only bin or box in the kitchen and filling it with your paper recycling. One ton of recovered paper will save three cubic metres of landfill space, fast becoming scarce.

Be kind to both the planet and waste collectors and put a bag of your clean recyclables next to your bin on rubbish day. This will save collectors a lot of time and is more hygienic for them. It is always a good idea to check with your local collector what they collect, as they won’t take recyclables that they cannot sell to a buy-back centre.

Common paper recyclables collected by waste collectors include cardboard boxes, office paper, dry food packagings such as cereal boxes, pizza and burger boxes – remove as much food residue as possible, toilet roll cores, grocery delivery bags and takeaway bags, milk and juice cartons (depending on the area), paper-based soft drink and coffee cups (depending on the area).

Some paper items might be recyclable but not taken by waste collectors – you can take these to a local recycling centre. Apart from paper items, many collectors will take PET cold drink bottles, fabric softener bottles, tins and cans.

Do not add these to recycling food waste, nappies, tissues and toilet paper, paper towels, or very dirty paper such as paper plates, or laminated office paper.

Fun fact: Since 2003, the South African paper industry has diverted more than 20 million tons of paper and paper packaging from landfill. This has saved 62 million cubic metres of landfill space. If baled, the amount of paper would go around the equator 1.5 times.

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