Showing posts with label recycling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycling. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 September 2018

$8m Recycling Initiative Approved By Lake Macquarie Council

BY LAUREN FREEMANTLE AND JARROD MELMETH

Lake Macquarie City Council has approved an $8 million asphalt plant at Teralba which will turn soft plastics and other recycled material into local roads.

Assets and infrastructure giant Downer Group are expected to begin work this month to replace its Rhondda Road facility with a new plant capable of incorporating recycled materials into the asphalt it produces.

Having been successfully trialled in Victoria and Sydney, it will be one of the first places in New South Wales to produce the sustainable asphalt, using materials that would once be considered waste.

Council's Sustainability Manager, Alice Howe, said materials produced at the plant would be used in Lake Macquarie and neighbouring local government areas.

"This is fantastic to see local businesses are really taking on the opportunity to reuse waste materials for beneficial applications. We are really proud to see this type of development in our region," Dr Howe said.

The approved development is one of many council recycling initiatives. Earlier this year council started using recycled glass sand in civil works projects, closing the loop on thousands of tonnes glass waste placed in the household bins each year. In July council also introduced a revamped three-bin service, where all food waste is placed in the green bin and converted into compost.

Existing Teralba Asphalt Plant.

Friday, 23 February 2018

Is the Hunters Recycling Industry Heading for the Tip?

BY TYLER FARDELL


On January 1st, The Chinese government stopped the import of recyclable materials and it left recycling businesses and kerbside pick-ups all across Australia struggling to maintain the current levels of recycling.

Already in Victoria some local councils have had to cut off some local recycling contracts and residents in some communities are being told to not use their yellow bins.

And here in the Hunter the first effects of the import ban are starting to show with recycling company Polytrade reducing the operation of their plant in Gateshead to a week by week basis.

Many residents are starting to get concerned they may be hit with an increased rate for the kerbside recycling bin pickup but Councillors are hopeful it may not come to that.

According to Lake Macquarie City Councils Director of City Strategy Tony Farrell, the Hunter is well-equipped to manage the situation for the short term.

"The Hunter has great recyclable waste facilities and the normal service of bin pick-up will continue as normal," he said.

"People should not be worried about an increase of rates at this time".

For the time being it seems everything will continue as normal, but council expects they will start to store glass recyclables very soon.

Mr Farrell is confident a long term solution will be found before the situation gets any worse.

"The worst outcome would be seeing recyclable materials end up in landfill and we're working hard to ensure it doesn't come to this".

Recycling plant in Gateshead
Source; GAP group



Thursday, 15 June 2017

What the cup?

BY JESSICA ROUSE

The Hunter is just one contributor to Australia's growing waste problem and with waste growing at double the rate of our population with 52 mega tonnes a year, something needs to be done.

Disposable coffee cups are at the top of the list of contributors to the problem with 98 per cent of paper coffee cups not recyclable due to a coating of polyethylene plastic and therefore often end up in landfill.

A huge 1.2 of the 3 million coffees sold daily in cafes throughout Australia are being poured into these disposable cups, which is equal to half a billion disposable cups in landfill every year, and that's just in Australia alone.

But, a former University of Newcastle student is trying to combat the problem - he's created a reusable SmartCup which coffee lovers can use again and again instead of using a paper coffee cup.

The frank green SmartCup and SmartBottle are combatting the growing waste problem one cup of coffee at a time, and creator Ben Young says what makes his 100 per cent reusable cups so great is actually what makes them so different.

"It's a very different product offering to our competitors particularly around style, the fact they don't leak, they're made of premium materials and one thing we're very unique about is we do everything here in Australia 100 per cent."

A three-part abcTV series War on Waste airing recently highlighted just how big the waste problem is in Australia giving more traction to the frank green company but they've already been operating for a couple of years both here in Australia and overseas.

Ben says being able to reuse a product is much more beneficial than simply recycling a product.

"People are worried about biodegradable cups, but to me, they're missing the point. The point is it takes a whole heap of energy and resources and plastic and paper to make any cup - that's one really important point that gets lost in this whole war on waste thing. It's not about whether they're recyclable or not, it's about not having them in the first instance."

Tuesday, 11 April 2017

New era of waste management in Cessnock

BY JESSICA ROUSE

It's a new era for waste management in Cessnock with an upgrade to the local waste facility with a new Waste Transfer System under construction.

The facility's construction began in January, and will allow residents to drop off items such as metals, garden organics, electronic waste, paints, oils and batteries with ease, to be recovered and recycled.

Waste Transfer System plan Image www.cessnock.nsw.gov.au

"This is big dollar business, third party licensed and monitored, and the greatest long term savings we can make is about the recapture of those resources that have a value and can be recycled and reprocessed to avoid landfill," said Manager of Environment and Waste Michael Alexander.

More often than not items which can be re purposed or recycled end up in landfill, instead of going to making a new product.

Michael Alexander says we need to get rid of the tip mentality and work towards a cleaner environment because "once it [rubbish] hits landfill, it's lost forever. It's certainly not the best environmental outcome, and this is just another step in that direction which compliments the services we already have".

Cessnock Mayor Bob Pynsent believes the redesign will be of huge benefit to the community once it's finished.

"The redesign not only offers the community more resource recovery opportunities but also will deliver a facility which has increased safety, and convenience."