Gourmet Night Market helps other events think Beyond the Bin
10 February 2016
Gourmet Night Market helps other events think Beyond the Bin with 97.6% landfill diversion
Gourmet Night Market in Mount Maunganui continues to lead the event pack in New Zealand, announcing today an outstanding landfill diversion average of 97.6%. The Bay of Plenty’s foodie paradise has continued to impress the events scene around New Zealand with event organisers and councils from all over the country calling event organiser Kim Renshaw to find out how she does it.
“In 2015 I received 15 phone calls from events wanting help to do ‘what we do’ with our waste. I also was asked to speak at multiple events including the Sustainable Business Network regional meeting and the national Waste Management conference run by WasteMinz. In June I realised there was a need for an organisation to provide training and education to event organisers who wanted to improve their approach to waste as well as deliver the service to larger events,” said Miss Renshaw.
Renshaw said that diverting event waste from landfill was pretty simple, but that event organisers had previously not believed the effort was worth it. By having an event already demonstrating the “zero waste” approach, the concept seemed more achievable to events in the same district.
Renshaw started Beyond the Bin, with a grant from social enterprise funder Toi Toi Manawa. Beyond the bin was designed to deliver training and education in conjunction with local councils around New Zealand. Beyond the Bin worked with waste service providers and composting facilities to establish whether or not composting event waste was possible in that area. Renshaw said that 80% of event waste was generally compostable, if different packaging choices were made by food vendors.
In late 2015 Beyond the Bin delivered the workshops as a pilot in Tauranga and Hastings. And the pilot has been successful, particularly in Tauranga where Council’s Resource Recovery Manager Rebecca Maiden said “Their techniques and enthusiasm have seen a marked improvement in the diversion achieved at events they have trained in our City.”
The
proof is in the pudding though it seems as the average
landfill diversion rate in events that have done the
training in Tauranga hovers around the 90% mark. “90%
diversion is technically zero waste. We acknowledge that
people bring things from home that contribute to the
landfill waste stream, but it’s the approach and
commitment that generates a teeny amount of waste onsite at
the event,” Miss Renshaw said.
Beyond the Bin were
talking to many councils in other areas of New Zealand that
were interested in their training and education programme,
Renshaw said the organisation needed to build capacity in
2016 to meet demand.
Gourmet Night Market has a team of 7 volunteer educators which help the public understand the concept. Sam Gray, Waste Manager said “Educators are the key to the system working. It takes all the hassle out for the public, removing any frustration. Add to that it’s a mandatory system at the Gourmet Night Market, so the vendors are only allowed to use approved packaging, this makes it a LOT easier when everything you’re holding in your hands can go in the compost bin.”
Gourmet Night Market
employed 3 teenagers from Mount College who were fundraising
for a trip to Spain. They were paid $25 per week for a 3 hr
shift “volunteering” and the money would go towards
their travel. Gray said the teenagers were all using skills
they could apply to the rest of their lives such as
communication, logistics and attention to detail.
Gourmet
Night Market has diverted 2.1 tonnes of waste during its
2015/16 season so far and has 4 more events planned for the
rest of February and a special sustainability market on
March 4th as part of Sustainable Backyards month.
What:
Gourmet Night Market
When: Friday evenings 5pm – dark
till March 4th
Where: Coronation Park, Mount
Maunganui
ends