
In
January 1997 the Plastics Federation of
South Africa's Environmental Committee,
together with key players in the industry, embarked
on a campaign involving the entire plastics industry
to make a meaningful contribution toward environmental
responsibility and meet the funding requirements
for the various projects, which had expanded to
the point where normal Federation sources no longer
sufficed. This campaign centred around a logo
- the Plastics Enviromark - registered in the
name of the Plastics Federation of South Africa,
which participants now use under licence.
Participants
in the programme were able to express their commitment
by using the logo on their plastics products and
also on stationery, marketing and advertising
material.
This
initiative is essentially the exclusive use of
a logo by Enviromark licensees (raw material suppliers,
plastics converters, certain retailers, Toyota and
certain plastics associations who contract to
support the programme. The organisations subscribing
to the Plastics Enviromark are able to express
their commitment to environmental responsibility
by use of the logo on their stationery and products.
The licensing fee is used by the Plastics Federation
to fund the various environmentally orientated
projects and activities. It is noteworthy that
some 80% of the plastics packaging industry are
currently contributing to this programme.
The
majority of environmental programmes over recent
years have been expressly intended to educate
and raise awareness. The following are some of
the more important ones:
- Polymer
Identification
- Environmental
Publications
- Video
Programmes
- A
wide range of specific school and community
programmes supporting environmental initiatives
in these institutions.
- Financial
support of educational and environmental bodies
– on some occasions in partnership with
DEAT (Department of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism)
- Major
sponsor of Keep South Africa Beautiful (KSAB)
for two and a half years. Specific programmes
during this time are estimated to have reached
some 250 000 school children.
- Programmes
to encourage the re-use of plastics products.
- Major
current initiatives are the "Three-Bag-System",
which has been commissioned at various newly
launched Garden Drop-off Centres, and the Green
Cage Project.
- Plastics
Recycling
The
Environmental Initiative has – from the
very beginning – strongly promoted plastics
recycling and the local plastics recycling industry.
South
Africa has been a world leader in the recycling
of plastics. The first entrants to this market
nearly thirty years ago were decades ahead of
their time and pioneered technology and equipment
for the rest of the world. The plastics recycling
sector in South Africa today is very competitive
with 100 plus operations nationally.
The
quantity of post consumer plastics waste recovered
and recycled each year equates to approximately
13% of the virgin polymer converted (nearly three
times the level achieved in first world countries)
and over 30% of the actual packaging polymers
used in South Africa.
The
Green Cage project supports the national plastics
recycling effort
Today
the plastics industry Environmental Initiative
stands firmly behind a well-structured programme
of education and awareness creation that is focused
on the main cause of litter: irresponsible social
attitudes of the majority of South African citizens.
For
more information on the Environmental Initiative
or other Environmental Issues contact Douw Steyn or Delanie Bezuidenhout on Tel: +27 11 314 4021, Fax: 011-314-3765.
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