ReSource August 2021

Page 5

EDITOR’S COMMENT

Going beyond recycling

Editor Nombulelo Manyana Managing editor Alastair Currie Head of design Beren Bauermeister Chief sub-editor Tristan Snijders Contributors Willem de Lange, Benita de Wet, Thurman Ezikiel, Lorren Haywood, Mishqah Hussain, Brendon Jewaskiewitz, Logan Moodley, Lerato Molefi, Suzan Oelofse, Garyn Rapson, Hugh Tyrrell, Eckart Zollner Production & client liaison manager Antois-Leigh Nepgen Production coordinator Jacqueline Modise Group sales manager Chilomia Van Wijk Distribution manager Nomsa Masina Distribution coordinator Asha Pursotham Printers Novus Print Montague Gardens Tel +27 (0)21 550 2300 Advertising sales Joanne Lawrie Cell +27 (0)82 346 5338 joanne@3smedia.co.za

Publisher Jacques Breytenbach 3S Media 46 Milkyway Avenue, Frankenwald, 2090 PO Box 92026, Norwood 2117 Tel +27 (0)11 233 2600 Fax +27 (0)11 234 7274/5 www.3smedia.co.za Annual subscription subs@3smedia.co.za R200.00 (incl VAT) South Africa ISSN 1680-4902 Institute of Waste Management of Southern Africa Tel +27 (0)11 675 3462 Email iwmsa@iwmsa.co.za All material herein is copyright protected and may not be reproduced either in whole or in part without the prior written permission of the publisher. The views and opinions of authors expressed in the magazine do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher, editor or the Institute of Waste Management of Southern Africa. © Copyright 2021. All rights reserved. Novus Holdings is a Level 2 Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment (BBBEE) Contributor, with 125% recognised procurement recognition. View our BBBEE scorecard here: https://novus.holdings/sustainability/ transformation The ABC logo is a valued stamp of measurement and trust, providing accurate and comparable circulation figures that protect the way advertising is traded. ReSource is ABC audited and certified.

We’ve all heard the classic trio: reduce, reuse, recycle. But ver y few people are aware that there are other steps you must take to reduce your impact on the environment – before ultimately recycling.

A

ccording to a report released by the UN Environment Programme and the CSIR in 2018, Africa recycles only 4% of the waste it generates. This is a far cry from the African Union’s vision that African cities will be recycling at least 50% of the waste they generate by 2023. We must start thinking differently about not only where our waste goes but rather what we can do to reduce our environmental footprint. Within the waste hierarchy, there are six principles of sustainability, namely: rethink, refuse, reduce, reuse, repair and recycle. Not only do these six principles of sustainability force us to think about our waste generation habits but they further the efforts of moving towards a circular economy. Let’s take a look at these pillars:

Rethink Do I really need that? According to this principle of sustainability, this is the first question you should be asking yourself. It implores consumers to question and understand that their consumption habits have an impact on the environment – and decide whether they want it to be negative or positive.

Reduce This might be the most important of the six principles. We need to be reducing the amount of waste we generate by making smarter decisions. The idea is to consume less, so we waste less.

Refuse This one basically implores consumers to refrain from buying products that are not environmentally friendly and rather buy those that lend themselves to being recycled. With the gazetted extended producer responsibility regulations, this will be an easy consideration.

Reuse Before throwing it away, repurpose that product in another way. Reinvent it by upcycling it. One of the articles in this issue looks at how the tyre industry is reusing and repurposing waste tyres (see page 26). Always look for alternative ways to use your products.

Repair Before you recycle, think to yourself: ‘Can I fix this?’ This part asks us to explore the different ways we can expand the shelf life of the product and/or make better use out of whatever we buy.

Recycle Lastly, if you cannot reuse the product, then recycle it. Practise separation at source and buy recyclable goods. With the regulations government has put in place and continues to implement, consumers have no excuse not to recycle. We must start thinking beyond simply recycling and rather about implementing sustainable practices within our daily activities.

Nombulelo AUGUST 2021

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Articles inside

SA GEARS UP TO CELEBRATE Clean-up & Recycle SA Week

2min
page 34

Waste reuse

3min
pages 43-44

Why composting should be part of your sustainability strategy

2min
page 45

EnviroServ joins government efforts to support circular economy

2min
page 39

How circular is the South African economy?

8min
pages 36-38

Delving into SA’s residential power use

4min
pages 40-42

SAPRO opens entries for awards

3min
page 35

From packets to pitches

2min
page 30

Spare pump parts more important than ever

1min
page 31

Driving sustainable practices in the tyre industry

4min
pages 28-29

No reclaimers, no recycling

5min
pages 26-27

Stellenbosch’s new waste MRF

4min
pages 24-25

Managing your waste to achieve legal compliance

8min
pages 22-23

Incentive project encourages lower- income areas to participate in recycling

5min
pages 12-14

Carbon tax compliance requires meaningful change

3min
pages 19-20

Register with the right PRO before 5 November

2min
page 18

Legislation preventing the recycling of mining waste

4min
pages 8-9

President’s comment

3min
page 7

Editor’s comment

3min
pages 5-6

News round-up

5min
pages 10-11

long-term solutions

3min
page 21
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