Thousands of plastic bottles from Iqaluit's water crisis to be turned into clothes and more - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 01:15 PM | Calgary | -10.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

Thousands of plastic bottles from Iqaluit's water crisis to be turned into clothes and more

The bottles will be sent to a recycling plant in Montreal where they will be processed and turned into material to make fiber like polyester.

8 sea cans filled with plastic bottles will be shipped south for recycling at the end of July

Water bottles in one of the sea cans being sent to Montreal for recycling. (Submitted by Brian Tattuniee)

Eight sea cans full of plastic water bottles are being sent from Iqaluit to Montreal for recycling at the end of July.

Hundreds of thousands of bottles of water were flown into Iqaluit during the city's water crisis last fall. A fuel contamination in Iqaluit's water supply meant the city's approximately 8,000 residents were unable to drink the tap water for two months.

Eight sea cans filled with water bottles from Iqaluit's water crisis. (Jackie McKay/CBC)

During that time the City of Iqaluit set up water depot stations where residents could pick up flats of plastic water bottles.

"This was a bit of a sudden influx of plastic that the city was going to expect to see in the landfill," said Brian Tattuinee, the business development manager for Nunavut Sealink and Supply Inc., which is partly owned by Arctic Co-operatives Limited.

"So we thought we could help alleviate some of that environmental impact from this emergency."

There are no recycling facilities in Iqaluit, forcing all the city's waste into the landfill regardless if it is recyclable or not.

When the water crisis began last October the co-op committed four sea cans to be filed with the plastic bottles to be sent south.

Some of the promised 80,000 litres of bottled water from the Nunavut government arrived in Iqaluit on Oct. 14, 2021. (Mario De Ciccio/Radio-Canada)

Tattuniee saidwith the help of the city and the Nunavut government, four more sea cans were donated and filled. He said this has saved approximately 265,000 litres of plastic from the landfill.

The eight sea cans of bottles are being sent out on the first sealift ship expected to arrive on July 28. They will be transported to Nunavut Sealink and Supply port in Sainte-Catherine, Quebec. From there the sea cans will be sent to Montreal Polymers, a plastic recycling company in Montreal.

Tattuniee wasn't able to say how much this process will cost the co-op.

"When all of this started to happen we weren't really concerned too much about what the cost might be," said Tattuniee. "We just understood, we thought we could do something so we decided lets try it."

Water bottles donated and handed out to residents in Iqaluit in October 2021. (Kenny Bell/Twitter)

Muhammad Naeem, president of Montreal Polymers, saidhis company likely won't make anything off of the water bottles being sent to them but are happy to do it because it is a good cause.

"We don't want anything to go to the landfill, it's a sin to send something to the landfillif you can reuse it," he said.

The bottles will be processed at the plant and turned into small plastic pellets that are washed and used to make fibrelike polyester. Those are then sold to companies that resell the material to industries that makeclothes and other items.