SA Affordable Housing May - June 2019 // Issue: 76 | Page 17

EVENTS Lightweight ‘concrete’ solution launched The polystyrene association presents municipalities with a viable solution that tackles employment, housing and waste. By the Polystyrene Association of South Africa The municipal polystyrene recycling hubs in South Africa. T he Polystyrene Association of South Africa has unveiled exciting plans to increase the collection and recycling rate of post-consumer polystyrene at its Annual General Meeting held in Midrand recently. “We have had phenomenal success with our various recycling projects over the past 11 years. During the 2017 / 2018 financial year, more than 6 300 tons of polystyrene was successfully diverted from our country’s landfills. When considering how light polystyrene weighs (it consists of 94% air) and that our recycling figures in 2013 stood at 1 849 tons, this is truly an achievement that we are incredibly proud of,” says Polystyrene Association CEO Adri Spangenberg. Although various end markets have been developed for recycled polystyrene used in the production of picture frames, cornices and stationery, the biggest success has undoubtedly been achieved using recycled polystyrene in lightweight concrete solutions. Polystyrene used in concrete applications can be of any colour or grade, clean or slightly contaminated as it gets chopped up and mixed with a special mixture of cement and other ingredients to form lightweight concrete that is waterproof, fire resistant, offers insulation against heat and cold and it is cheaper and easier to build with than traditional bricks or concrete. www.saaffordablehousing.co.za BOTTLENECKS IN THE RECYCLING SUPPLY CHAIN According to Spangenberg, one of the biggest stumbling blocks identified in the recycling supply chain, is the challenge of getting the polystyrene out of the waste stream and to recyclers in time and consistently. “There is a substantial (and growing) demand for the recycled material in South Africa and an abundant supply of polystyrene packaging material that can be recycled. However, the industry has experienced bottlenecks in various areas of this supply chain. A desperate need for material has necessitated the industry to address the logistical issues that hamper the recycling of polystyrene. Much of our focus, energy and attention this past year has been on developing a workable, financially viable solution which we submitted to government as part of our Industry Waste Management Plan,” Spangenberg explains. POLYSTYRENE TRADING HUBS IN METRO CITIES The first step towards addressing logistics challenges of recycling polystyrene is set through the forming of Trading Hub Clusters (THCs), which represent all relevant industries in the value chain. “This is a centralised operation which streamlines the entire process by bringing polystyrene recycling under one roof within a geographical area, therefore relieving the MAY - JUNE 2019 15