Sustainability
Conference

2023

Nico Van Niekerk, CEO, Safripol

Our CEO, Nico Van Niekerk reiterates our commitment to the pursuit of a working circular economy, safeguarding natural resources and creating a sustainable future. Nico explains that plastic waste has value, but it takes willingness and action on the part of all stakeholders in the value chain through ever-greater recycling efforts. Nico also announces the launch of Safripol’s first recycled polyethylene terephthalate plastic (rPET) product, ASPIRER , which contains 15% to 25% post-consumer recycled plastic. He explains the anticipated impact this new product will have across the entire plastic waste recycling value chain and also points out that it will help manufacturers to adhere to the new Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) regulations.

Watch highlights from our 4th annual Sustainability Conference held on 15th and 16th of March 2023.05.08

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Legislation aims to drive plastic sustainability and circularity forward

Barbara Creecy, Minister of the Department of Forestry, Fisheries, and the Environment explains the government’s drive to move plastic sustainability and circularity forward stating that legislation requires plastic carrier bags and plastic flat bags are to be made from 75% recycled materials from 2025 and 100% from 2027. The Minister highlights the support of the industry for the Industrial Policy Action Plan, the Plastics Master Plan, amended plastic bag regulations, and the new Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) regulations implemented in 2022.

Annabe Pretorius, Plastics SA executive, points to the need for improvement when it comes to re-use so that materials are kept in circulation longer.
Graham Holder, MD at the Circular Economy for Flexible Packaging (Ceflex), suggests that to be sustainable, the plastic circular economy needs to be demand-driven and explains the Ceflex initiative and their aim of making all flexible packaging in Europe circular by 2025.

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Minister Barbara Creecy, DFFE
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Annabé Pretorius, Plastics SA
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Graham Houlder, Ceflex
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Sustainability Conference 2023 Q&A 1

Driving circularity through re-use and recycling

Kalojan Iliev, CEO of Erema, a market leader for plastic recycling machines, talks about the need for chemical recycling to recycle plastic that can’t be mechanically recycled, outlining however that chemical recycling only makes sense when there are the necessary volumes as the costs are too high to accommodate low volumes.

Helen Mcgeough, a senior analyst for plastic recycling at Independent Commodity Intelligence Services (ICIS) HBE talks about the macroenvironment for plastic recycling being challenging currently given high energy and feedstock costs.

The discussion continues on the high expectations of what the UN’s Environment Assembly (UNEA-5) Resolution will deliver.

Chadru Wadhwani, the joint MD of Exrupet suggests that the key to responding to some of the challenges facing plastics is to use a higher content of recycled material in plastic products. Plastic waste pollution will not be addressed unless products are designed with recycling in mind. Walter Jordaan, Director at Myplas shared some of the successes in polyolefin recycling in South Africa, but stressed that change is required across the value chain to grow the industry.

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Kalojan Iliev, Erema
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Helen Mcgeough, ICIS-HBE
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Chandru Wadhwani, Extrupet
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Walter Jordaan, Myplas
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Sustainability Conference 2023 Q&A 2

Re-use models versus traditional one-way packaging

Dr Pippa Notten, the principal consultant at The Green House, a Cape Town-based sustainability consulting firm explains that lifecycle assessment studies help decision-makers to evaluate the environmental performance of a product system. It is important to consider the whole packaging system, widespread distribution, standardisation, competitive pricing and critically, accessibility and convenience.

Klaus-Peter Schmidt, Head of Global Product Development & Global Sustainability Management at Mauser, discusses cascading re-use and recycling in industrial packaging and emphasises that the core principles of sustainable packaging don’t change.

Peter Sandkuehler, Sustainability Director for EMEA at Dow Packaging & Speciality Plastics, revealed that Dow has committed to accelerating the circular ecosystem by transforming waste and alternative feedstock to deliver three million metric tons of circular and renewable solutions per year by 2030.

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Dr Pippa Notten, The Green House
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Klaus-Peter Schmidt, Mauser
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Peter Sandkuehler, Dow
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Sustainability Conference 2023 Q&A 3

Case studies: brand owners driving plastics circularity

South African brand owners discuss how they are driving sustainability and advancing plastic circularity.

Devin Galtrey, sustainability, and packaging specialist at Spar, talks about Spar’s ‘Our Tomorrow’ initiative and how they have set themselves ambitious targets to ensure that in the next couple of years, 100% of its packaging will be reusable.

Nozicelo Ngcobo, PACS Director at CCBSA, the 4th largest Coca-Cola bottler globally, updates us on their ‘World without waste’ initiative, launched in 2018 with the aim of collecting and recycling a bottle or can for every one the company sells. The group is in the process of removing colour from its packaging with Sprite being the first product to remove colour.

Rowena Gilpin, sustainable plastics lead for Africa at Unilever, reaffirmed Unilever’s vision to be a global leader when it comes to sustainability with plans to halve the amount of virgin plastic it uses in its packaging by 2025 and to collect and process more plastic packaging that it sells.

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Devin Galtrey – Spar
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Nozicelo Ngcobo – Coca Cola
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Rowena Gilpin – Unilever
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Sustainability Conference 2023 Q&A 4

Collection and education key to mobilise circularity

Mark mcClue shared the Hennops Revival story and demonstrated how active citizenship can bring about a movement of change and drive positive impact at grass-roots levels. Londiwe Mbuyisa, a founder of Isphepho Enviro Ambassadors, a recycling buy-back centre based in Umlazi, KwaZulu-Natal, supported by Safripol, explains that they collect waste from 40 schools where a separation at source programme has been implemented. The initiative ensures that learners buy into the scheme and get excited about recycling waste.

Nicholas Kolesch, vice president of the Alliance to End Plastic Waste detailed the alliance’s focus is on improving the collection, sorting, processing, recycling, and valorisation of plastic waste via 60 projects across 30 countries. In SA, the alliance is supporting plastic circularity via projects based in KwaZulu-Natal, Gauteng, and the Western Cape.

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Mark McClue in place of Tarryn Johnston – Hennops Revival
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Londiwe Mbuyisa – Isphepho
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Nicholas Kolesch, Alliance to End Plastic Waste
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Sustainability Conference 2023 Q&A 5

Producer responsibility organisations (PROs) growing plastic circularity in SA

All producers are required by law to become members of an approved extended producer responsibility (EPR) scheme or producer responsibility organisation (PRO).

Polyco is a non-profit organisation representing all plastic packaging polymer types. It also manages all plastic types under South Africa’s new EPR regulations. Since its establishment it has invested more than R55 million into plastic recycling in South Africa, collecting and recycling thousands of tonnes of plastic packaging through various initiatives. Francois Marais, the executive EPR specialist at Polyco, discusses education and awareness as a primary focus of Polyco.

Petco CEO Cheri Stoltz highlights the importance of the value chain, including collection, recycling capacity and end-use demand in promoting a circular economy. She explains
Petco support to the value chain by paying waste pickers a service fee, providing material-specific support, and logistics support for collection in rural areas, and paying an export subsidy and a finished goods subsidy. Stoltz references partnerships with Safripol and with the Coca-Cola Foundation that have enabled a number of successful programmes and initiatives to establish buy-back centres, implement litter boom solutions in rivers, and to track and trace recyclables, amongst others.

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Sustainability Conference 2023 Q&A 6
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Francois Marias – Polyco
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Cheri Scholtz – PETCO