Hospice Mid-Northland chief executive Cristina Ross and Cbec Eco-Solutions environmental educator Anouk van Donzel with sacks of clothes that can’t be resold. Photo / Jenny Ling
Hospice Mid-Northland chief executive Cristina Ross and Cbec Eco-Solutions environmental educator Anouk van Donzel with sacks of clothes that can’t be resold. Photo / Jenny Ling
Northland charity op shops inundated with dumped clothes unfit for resale are involved in a region-wide trial that turns the garments into mattresses and insulation for families in need.
Sixteen op shops and organisations – mainly hospice shops in the Bay of Islands and Whangārei, and other op shopsin Whangārei and Mangawhai – are involved in the six-month trial by Kaitāia-based Community Business and Environment Centre (Cbec).
The clothes are collected by Cbec’s Eco Solutions arm and sent to Textile Products, a textile waste processing company in Auckland, where they are sorted, shredded and turned into mattresses and insulation.
The transformed products are then returned to Cbec.
“We get a lot that are marked, stained, torn, and not good for reselling,” she said.
“We recently got a big box of dirty underwear, and a big black bag full of clothing and rat poo.
“It’s an ongoing thing; it’s a national problem for a lot of charities.”
Now, instead of paying for skip bins or dropping items off at transfer stations, clothes are stripped of zips and buttons by volunteers, then put into large sheep-wool sacks, which Cbec collects every couple of weeks.
The move is saving Hospice Mid-Northland, based in Kerikeri, up to $300 a week.
Cbec’s eco solutions manager Jo Shanks said the mattress project, done in partnership with Healthy Homes Tai Tokerau, received $150,000 in government funding for the first part of the trial, with Cbec funding the other half.
The clothing is sorted into three lots according to fabric type: 80% were mixed textiles used for mattresses, 10% were pure polyester used for insulation, and 10% were pure wool, cotton, and silk, used for erosion matting.
Whangārei Hospital is also on board, handing over disused “blue wrap” – polypropylene plastic sheeting used to wrap surgical instruments in operating rooms.
A Health NZ spokeswoman said the material accounts for about nine tonnes of waste annually.
“Through Cbec’s programme, we are pleased to divert approximately seven tonnes of this material from landfill annually,” she said.
Shanks said the blue wrap was made into good-quality plastic boards for bathrooms and kitchens for iwi housing in Northland.
Excess clothing was a “massive consumer problem,” she said.
The average charity op shop was getting rid of five 240-litre bags of clothes per week, she said.
“It’s raising awareness of how wasteful the textile industry is.
“Textiles is the largest-growing waste stream in the world.
Jenny Ling is a senior journalist at the Northern Advocate. She has a special interest in covering human interest stories, along with finance, roading, and social issues.