Coca-Cola, Diageo, Nestlé, Unilever spearhead Africa Plastics Recycling Alliance
Image credit: Diageo/Twitter
The Coca Cola Company,
Diageo,
Nestlé and
Unilever this morning
launched the Africa Plastics Recycling Alliance (APRA) at the CEO Africa
Forum in Kigali, Rwanda. This Alliance aims to turn the challenge of
plastic waste in Sub-Saharan Africa into an opportunity to create jobs and
commercial activity by improving the collection and recycling of plastics —
much like organizations such as
Thread and The Plastic
Bank have done in
Haiti and PepsiCo is working to do in South
America.
The APRA has been established for companies
to:
-
Facilitate and support their local subsidiaries to engage proactively in
market-level public-private partnerships, industry collaboration and
alliances
-
Share knowledge, encourage innovation and collaborate on technical and other
solutions appropriate for Sub-Saharan Africa, as well as participate in
local pilot initiatives
-
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“Plastics will remain an important packaging material if we are to give
African consumers the safe and affordable products they need. However, we
need to ensure that used packaging does not end up as litter,” the founding
companies said in a statement. “Unfortunately, a lack of collection and
recycling capacity in many African markets coupled with growing populations
is creating a growing problem of plastics waste. We see an opportunity to
tackle that problem in a way that creates jobs and reduces dependency on
imported materials while alternatives to plastics are developed.
Collaboration within and across markets will be key to success so we are
proud to launch the Africa Plastics Recycling Alliance today to increase
those efforts and play our part as companies in finding solutions that work
for Africa.”
All four companies have individual commitments to rein in their own plastics
waste, and are signatories to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s New Plastics
Economy Global
Commitment;
the APRA augments existing private-sector initiatives to tackle plastic
pollution in Sub-Saharan Africa, such as GRIPE (Ghana
Recycling Initiative by Private Enterprises) and
FBRA (The Food & Beverage Recycling
Alliance), in Nigeria, and will aim to develop unique solutions in order to
address the region’s unique challenges.
As Gabriel Opoku-Asare, Head of Society at Diageo Africa, told Beverage
Daily:
"Any initiatives we develop under this collaboration will aim to have
comprehensive plans, will be appropriate to the local context and will be
consistent with the principles of the New Plastics Economy Global Commitment."
TerraCycle, Hi-Cone partner on ring carrier recycling
Image credit: TerraCycle
Meanwhile, Hi-Cone — a global manufacturer of ring
carriers for the beverage industry — has become the first non-branded company
worldwide to partner with
TerraCycle.
According to the British Plastics Federation, items such as ring carriers
are collected and recycled by very few local authorities in the UK; through
their initiative, Hi-Cone and TerraCycle have
therefore decided to lead the effort to tailor recycling techniques to
individual waste streams, starting in the UK, ensuring that ring carriers can be
collected and recycled, and have a new life after
use,
as products such as park benches, outdoor furniture and composite lumber.
While companies including
E6PR
and
Carlsberg
have developed sustainable solutions to the standard plastic carrier rings —
which are hard to recycle and can even be dangerous to animals — their
technologies have yet to be adopted by the beverage industry at large. The
TerraCycle-Hi-Note initiative aims to create a UK-wide network of public-access
ring carrier recycling points — consumers can search online for their nearest
dedicated collection point, or can sign up as a private collector and download
postage-paid mailing labels to send their used ring carriers to TerraCycle for
recycling.
“We are extremely excited to be launching this new initiative
with TerraCycle, which means that our product is now fully recyclable in the
UK,” said Hi-Cone president Kenneth Escoe. “It is vital that packaging
producers take the lead in pushing sustainable programmes forward, and that is
why we have stepped in at this stage of our own journey to champion this process
with TerraCycle. We will be monitoring the progress of this initiative very
closely as it rolls out in the UK, and will then assess the possibility of
widening its scope further into Europe, the US and beyond.”
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Mar 26, 2019 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET