Nor'West News: June 03, 2021
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
4 Thursday <strong>June</strong> 3 <strong>2021</strong><br />
Latest Canterbury news at starnews.co.nz<br />
NOR’WEST NEWS<br />
Using science and recycling as a way<br />
• By Bea Gooding<br />
RUDY KRAMERS considers<br />
himself a bit of a mad scientist.<br />
“I love blowing things up. I<br />
used to spend a lot of time at<br />
my kids’ school doing science<br />
demonstrations – the bigger the<br />
bang, the more excited they got.”<br />
For as long as he can remember,<br />
science and technology have<br />
run through his veins. And while<br />
most people shied away from live<br />
electricity, Kramers gravitated<br />
towards it.<br />
It is what made him the<br />
perfect fit to join the team at<br />
Molten Media Trust, a charity<br />
that promotes the ethical<br />
recycling of electronics by refurbishing<br />
devices destined for<br />
landfill.<br />
Said Kramers: “I love the idea<br />
of electrons running through<br />
a wire, you can’t see it, but you<br />
know it’s there. And if there’s<br />
enough of it, you can feel it, even<br />
if it means getting an electric<br />
shock.”<br />
Molten Media stopped 30<br />
tonnes of electronic waste from<br />
going to landfill last year.<br />
Eighty to 90 per cent of<br />
dismantled component parts<br />
are also diverted away from the<br />
dump.<br />
People and businesses donate<br />
unwanted TVs, computers,<br />
phones, printers and other<br />
ZERO WASTE: Rudy Kramers is the perfect fit as trustee of Molten Media because science<br />
and technology run through his veins.<br />
PHOTO: GEOFF SLOAN<br />
devices for the trust to repair or<br />
refurbish.<br />
They are often stripped for<br />
parts that are either sold through<br />
the trust’s online store or put<br />
towards building something new<br />
to donate to community groups<br />
who cannot afford brand new<br />
devices, like computers.<br />
A software developer by<br />
trade, Kramers’ arrival as a<br />
trustee last year came at a time<br />
when the charity was entering<br />
“dangerous territory” as a result<br />
of Covid-19.<br />
It was on the brink of closure<br />
after operating for more than<br />
two decades. Income dropped<br />
to “almost nothing” during the<br />
lockdown as donations stopped<br />
flowing in.<br />
Excluding the trustees, there<br />
were only two staff on hand to<br />
process a massive backlog of<br />
electronics needing to be taken<br />
apart.<br />
Tasks like separating plastic<br />
away from steel were timeconsuming<br />
enough as it is.<br />
“Covid was the final nail in the<br />
coffin. Having the money to pay<br />
rent each month was the crux of<br />
whether the place was viable or<br />
not,” Kramers said.<br />
“Trying to sell stuff is getting<br />
harder because companies like<br />
PB Tech and Noel Leeming are<br />
selling stuff so much cheaper<br />
than they ever have.<br />
“We’d be lucky to get $50 for a<br />
second-hand TV.”<br />
Selling parts and refurbished<br />
devices to help cover funding<br />
shortfalls got more challenging<br />
because people were willing to<br />
pay less.<br />
“Metal prices are trending<br />
downwards,” said Kramers.<br />
“Countries like China who are<br />
big buyers of steel and scrap were<br />
paying less for it, so the amount<br />
of money we were getting from<br />
metal recyclers has [also] gone<br />
down.<br />
But following personal cash<br />
injections from the pockets of<br />
trustees, Kramers felt confident<br />
the trust can be self-sufficient<br />
again without relying on grants,<br />
which were hard to come by.<br />
His confidence derives from<br />
a place of wanting to see the<br />
charity succeed and a passion for<br />
sustainability, even if it did come<br />
with its frustrations.