Regulated product stewardship driving transition to a circular economy
By Trevor Tutt – GM Innovation, 3R Group Something which will affect almost all New Zealand businesses has mostly flown under the radar since it was announced during the covid pandemic. A swath of products are set to fall under regulated product stewardship for the first time in New Zealand after they were announced as priority products in July 2020. This means, for the first time in Aotearoa New Zealand, regulated product stewardship schemes are being established for tyres, electronic waste, single-use plastic packaging, synthetic refrigerant gases, agricultural plastics, and agrichemicals. So, if you rely on refrigeration, transport, electronics, or plastic packaging for your goods, you may be affected. It’s a big range of products, with more likely to be announced following government consultation on ways to accelerate product stewardship in new waste legislation. What is regulated stewardship? Product stewardship sees scheme members contribute towards the collection of their products at the end of life so they can be reused, recycled or properly disposed of. This usually means a stewardship fee is charged at the point of manufacture or import and is used by a scheme to achieve better environmental outcomes. The pay-off is improved environmental performance and brand reputation, as well as reduced risk from environmental harm. New Zealand has several voluntary stewardship schemes where participation is just as the name suggests – voluntary. These can suffer from limitations due to insufficient data and resources, and free riders – those who don’t contribute but whose products are stewarded through the scheme. Regulated stewardship sees all of industry required to participate. This provides a level playing field with no free riders. Schemes are therefore better resourced financially and through industry support such as knowledge sharing and collaboration. Data capture is also greatly improved. Regulated schemes are better equipped to reduce […]