Machine new way to recycle

One of New Zealand’s first reverse vending machines for recycling cans and plastic bottles began operating on the University of Otago campus yesterday.

Instead of putting money into a machine which then dispenses drinks, people put empty cans and plastic bottles into the new machine and receive discount vouchers to cut the cost of future drinks.

A wide range of drinks, including bottled water, juices and carbonated beverages, are involved in a joint campaign between the university and drinks manufacturer Frucor Suntory to encourage recycling.

Otago University Students Association administrative vice-president Georgia Mischefski-Gray (21)...
Otago University Students Association administrative vice-president Georgia Mischefski-Gray (21) uses the first reverse vending machine on campus. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH

University chief operating officer Stephen Willis welcomed the recycling initiative.

Otago University Students Association administrative vice-president Georgia Mischefski-Gray said the machine, located in The Link, was a positive development.

University sustainability office head Ray O’Brien said five million plastic bottles had been recycled in just over a year when a supermarket chain had introduced reverse vending machines in five of its outlets in Britain in 2018.

Worldwide, the sale of drinks in plastic bottles totalled about $480 billion in 2016, but fewer than half were recycled.

The rest ended up in landfills, oceans or rivers, littered the landscape, or were burnt, he said.

john.gibb@odt.co.nz

Comments

Great idea. I first used such a machine in 2002/2003 in Europe. Good to see NZ is catching up.

 

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