Choosing futures Waikato

 
 

Proportion of recycling - Taupo District

Key points

This indicator measures the volume of waste diverted from landfills to recycling facilities, as a percentage of the estimated amount of waste disposed at landfills for selected territorial authorities in the Waikato Region. As industrial activities expand and our population increases we are using more resources and generating more waste. However, much of our waste could be reused, recycled or composted. Waste disposal is expensive and can cause environmental problems. The less waste we produce, the less we need to dispose of, and the more we use our resources sustainably.

  • In 2005 Taupo District diverted 28.5% of its waste from landfill by recycling, which is well above a Ministry for the Environment national estimate for 2005 of 10%.  
  • The amount of waste recovered (recycled) per person in Taupo District between 2003 and 2004 has increased.
  • Volumes per capita of recycling are generally increasing throughout the Region.  According to recent survey results from the Ministry for the Environment, recycling per capita is higher in the Waikato Region than it is in other regions throughout New Zealand.

Waste diverted from landfill (recycled) for selected territorial authorities in the Waikato Region – 2005

  Hamilton City Hauraki District Matamata-Piako District South Waikato District Taupo District
2001 population 114,921 16,764 29,469 23,472 31,521
2001 households 40,962 6,219 10,692 8,013 11,262
Volume diverted 8,158 n/a 3,135 1,500 15,952
% diverted 8.9% n/a 15.6% 8.5% 28.5%
Resource recovery centres 3 2 3 2 7
Population per RR centre 38,307 8,382 9,823 11,736 4,503

Source: Responsible Resource Recovery Ltd (“Regional Recycling and Recovery Infrastructural Review”), 2005.

Note: The source of this data acknowledges that it may have been collected inconsistently between districts, so provides a best estimate only in comparative terms.

Per capita waste recovery in selected districts between 2001 and 2005

Graph showing per capita waste recovery in selected districts between 2001 and 2005.

Source: Responsible Resource Recovery Ltd (“Regional Recycling and Recovery Infrastructural Review”), 2005
Note: The source of this data acknowledges that it may have been collected inconsistently between districts, so provides a best estimate only in comparative terms.

What agencies are doing

EW/TA partners to add bullet points to summarise relevant initiatives

What you can do to help

EW/TA partners to add bullet points which support initiatives listed above

More information

More detail on this indicator, including how and where this information is collected, is available here.

What we want to achieve

The community outcome we are seeking to achieve by increasing the proportion of recycling is:

  • Waste reduction, recycling, energy conservation and energy efficiency are promoted and are part of how we all live.