Finnair flies toward recycling goal
As Koskela describes it the Corenso mill in Varkaus was developed to separate the three materials from liquid paper packaging: aluminum foil and paper is recycled while the polyethylene is separated and used to feed a gasification plant that provides heat to the facility.
“One of the primary reasons for this process is that the fiber used in both foodservice board and brick-style containers is one of the best quality fibers in the world” Koskela points out. “So its quality and value is quite high. In fact part of the material flow for this plant comes from liquid container waste from Germany. The value of the recycled fiber allows the process to accommodate the transportation costs.”
For Huhtamaki the recycled paper from Corenso usually used to make fiber cores helps close the production loop. “This quite nicely closes the environmental loop because Huhtamaki buys paperboard from Stora Enso” Koskela notes with pride.
What happens at Helsinki
The key to this process is specifying the right materials for use on board Finnair aircraft and the ability to recover them for recycling. Few changes in inflight materials have been made except for the molded pulp tray says Asplund. In the case of the trays they are collected in the food trolleys aboard the airplanes she says.
“Later when the trolleys go to our Finnair Catering unit the trays are separated while the reusable materials and the trolleys are diverted for washing” says Asplund who is also a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine. Other waste trolleys on the aircraft are used to collect glass metal plastic and food waste.
Asplund points out that some glass is refillable so it has to be separated from the glass to be recycled. Most inflight plastic containers when they can be separated from other waste are collected and later granulated near the airport and used as a fuel for incineration plants.
“For the onboard plastics waste we use a system that isn’t strictly a recycling system” Koskela points. “Because we burn the ground plastic we call it ‘thermal recycling.’” It’s much the same process as used by the Varkaus mill with the polyethylene that’s removed from the liquid container packaging.
“With any kind of recycling system it’s important to use all of the recycling or recovery options” Koskela says. “By using the waste plastics to generate thermal energy at least we’re not creating more waste. So the burning of plastics is not always a bad thing. Incineration is not always a popular option even in Europe but it’s the best option for this waste.”
Training is important
As Asplund explains the complete recycling program has been in development since 1998. “As a smaller company many of these procedures are quite easy for us. We have only two catering units for the Helsinki airport” she points out.
All 1 crew members of Finnair have been trained in the separation and collection process and this continues on at least an annual basis. “In addition we continue to keep the crew informed about environmental matters our goals and targets and of course our achievements” Asplund says. “As well each crew has one member appointed as a part-time supervisor for environmental matters.”
The airline communicates regularly with its passengers about sorting waste for recycling primarily using inflight magazines and the airline’s communications department.
“Of course the success of our recycling program is dependent on our customers’ efforts not only those of the airline flight crews” Asplund points out. “The passengers have been extremely supportive. But it will take some time for them to change old habits such as tucking used plastic wrappers inside paper cups.”
What about fees?
Neither Koskela nor Asplund wanted to directly address the specific economics of packaging or recycling fees. “In Finland we have recycling fees that are established in a way similar to the DSD system in Germany” says Koskela.
“However in Finland our fees are more sensibly planned and implemented. That’s because our recycling infrastructure has been created together with industry and to meet quotas. But our systems are ‘lean and mean’ and that results in significantly lower levels of recycling costs.” Depending on the material he estimates costs in Finland are as little as 10% of those charged in Germany.
In addition Koskela notes that landfilling fees are reduced for companies like Finnair Catering that source-separate materials. “This encourages packaging users like Finnair to do more sorting even of those materials that it can’t recycle. The possibility of changing from a mixed waste stream into sorted waste is one of the key drivers for Finnair. It creates a positive economical effect in addition to the environmental image” Koskela adds.
Overall Asplund says “our target is to recycle 40 percent of all [onboard] waste by the end of the year. The interest on the part of passengers has been rapidly increasing.”
Nearly all Finnair on-board waste is taken to its main catering unit most of it already source separated. “We have created an infrastructure where it can be separated even further and moved to the appropriate waste collection stations or even to some factories” Asplund explains.
“One of the drivers for us on this project is to show that instead of creating a lot of restrictive legislation with fancy terms like ‘producer responsibility’ we can do practical projects without government pressure” Koskela says. “Legislators are now starting to listen to us telling us ‘that’s a sensible thing to do.’”














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