From the article:
According to NES, it is crucial to reduce the number of plastics being imported for the food and beverage industry which includes tourism and retail, as well as increase circularity and reuse in country to reduce the amount of plastic waste currently entering the environment.
Roland Neururer, food and beverage manager at The Edgewater Resort, said their biggest challenge is the single-use plastics....
Waste management is also a key issue due to the high costs to export and dispose of waste, including recyclable material, and market challenges.
The estimated project cost of the GEF-8 Plastics RESPONSE Project is US$6.2 million (NZ$10m) and will be implemented across five years from 2024 to 2029.
NES and Infrastructure Cook Islands (ICI) have been identified as the executing agencies for this project.
The expected results for this project are:
To develop and strengthen upstream policies to limit plastic pollution,
Support roll-out of food and beverage plastic packaging imported into the country,
Support the private sector, NGOs and community solutions,
National data on plastics to improve decision making, and
Document knowledge exchange and lessons.
According to a Cook Islands 2020 Waste Audit, 1.5 million plastic bottles were imported in the one-year report period and single use plastic accounted for 20 per cent of total plastic products imported.
Plastics made up 94 per cent of the total waste stream in the Pa Enua hospitality sector and 13 per cent of Rarotonga and 20 per cent of Aitutaki households.
The audit also found that plastics were a dominant waste category across business types, particularly accommodation and retail. Waste composition of businesses was 23.6 per cent plastics (17-42 per cent range) and 5.7 per cent single use plastics (4-11 per cent range). Sports and leisure businesses had the highest proportion of single use items (20 per cent). Of the 2805m³ total volume of waste to landfill, 20 per cent is plastics and 5 per cent is single use plastics, and import/export data suggests very little material is exported for recycling or recovery.