Oman Environmental Services Holding Company (be’ah), the nation’s solid waste management entity, says it
will oversee the roll-out of at least 25 reverse vending machines (RVMs) at key locations across Muscat Governorate
this
year – part of a pilot to weigh the feasibility of a broader deployment.
In all, 50 such machines are planned for installation across the capital city, the government-owned company noted. To
this end, it has signed agreements with a number of corporate partners who “share the same sustainability
objectives”, it stated.
Targeted primarily at PET waste, the machines will serve as kiosks for people to dispose of empty PET bottles.
Non-PET bottles and other items will be rejected by the machines, which are equipped with sensors to accept only PET
containers.
As an incentive-driven scheme to encourage sustainable recycling practices, the RVMs will offer points that can be
converted into rewards from be’ah’s partners in the venture.
PET bottles collected from the machines will be periodically sent for recycling as part of a wider effort to divert
plastic waste currently ending up in landfills into the circular economy. As much as a fifth of all municipal waste
is
made up of plastic, with PET bottles accounting for a substantial portion of this volume, says be’ah.
Data collected from the pilot project will be analysed to study its effectiveness and aid similar recycling
initiatives
in the future, be’ah added.
Source: Oman Observer