New Zealand Listener

What a waste

Every day in New Zealand, 17,000 tonnes of construction and demolition waste is dumped into landfills. That’s up to twice the tonnage the general public produces as household waste, according to the Building Research Association of New Zealand (Branz).

While politicians and the public wring their hands about plastic drinking straws, single-use bags and fruit labels, Branz says the construction and demolition (C&D) sector is one of the largest waste producers in New Zealand.

It’s a hidden problem, says Mark Roberts, senior waste planning specialist at Auckland Council. About 90% of it could be diverted from landfills for reuse or recycling, but isn’t.

“It’s created on building sites that are fenced off,” says Roberts. “It goes into high-sided skip bins, so you can’t see what’s in there. And then it’s transported to a landfill.”

Diversion of C&D waste from landfills in NZ is estimated at 17%. In Denmark, the figure is 87%.

With little incentive to do otherwise, builders and contractors choose the cheapest skip provider. Inside that skip will be rubble, wood, plastic, metal, plasterboard, insulation, packaging and a range of materials. “If they’re lucky, [the skips] might go to somewhere like Green Gorilla or Waste Management, where it’s sorted,” says Roberts. “The general public don’t go to those places. That’s why the public zeroes in on things like straws and plastic bags and coffee cups.”

INTERNATIONAL LAGGARD

New Zealand’s scorecard on C&D waste is poor compared with many other developed

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Zealand Listener

New Zealand Listener3 min read
Uncovering Our Past
There’s a Māori whakataukī (proverb) that says, “Kia whakatōmuri te haere whakamua. / I walk backwards into the future with my eyes fixed on the past.” The loop of past, present and future speaks to New Zealand Wars: Stories of Tauranga Moana, the la
New Zealand Listener6 min read
Weaving Welsh With Waiata
You probably saw it on the news. Last month, Dame Kiri Te Kanawa ONZ, one of our most revered cultural figures, was honoured at Parliament. The occasion was Dame Kiri’s 80th birthday but this was a celebration of a life, not a day. There were speeche
New Zealand Listener5 min read
‘That German boy’
On the day after World War I began, my father, at 18, volunteered with enthusiasm to join the Bavarian Artillery. He survived the terrible Battle of the Somme, won two Iron Crosses and ended the war, defeated, in a military hospital in Alsace. Lieute

Related Books & Audiobooks