Inside Waste February/March 2022

Page 40

Circular Economy //

Freeing Trevor to drive the Circular bus By Mike Ritchie “We can achieve a Circular Economy by 2025” was the proposition in a debate run by the Young Professionals of WMRR. I chaired the “No” side. “No chance” we said (and won). And here is why. The two ends of our economy are broken. The economy is very efficient at mining, manufacturing, using and disposing of materials. The so called “Take, Make, Dispose” linear flow of materials. To be ‘circular’ our economy needs fixes at each end. The front end “Design” side (what can be put into the economy) needs root and branch reform to allow for reuse and recycling a “end of life”. There is not a single law in Australia that requires design for recycling or reuse. In fact, we have just had a Parliamentary Inquiry into the Right to Repair - for God’s sake. That is, do I have the right to repair something I already own? We are a long way from requiring producers of goods to design them for recycling and reuse. And at the back end, “Recycling” end of the economy, we still default to landfilling over reuse or recycling. Why? Because the economics of (most) recycling, is broken. Because landfill is cheap. As long as landfill is the cheapest disposal option for materials that have ended their first life, it will always be the most economically rational outcome for businesses and waste generators. Cheap landfills are like oversized vacuum cleaners. They suck up waste and recyclables indiscriminately. The cheaper the price, the higher their suction power. No rational recycler will set up a business to compete with low cost landfills. Here is a quick snapshot of the resources our economy ‘wastes’ into landfill: • 7 million tonnes of construction and demolition material. • 6 million tonnes of commercial material. • 7 million tonnes of organics. • 85 per cent of all food waste is landfilled. • 84 per cent of all plastic is landfilled. • 93 per cent of all textiles and clothing is landfilled. • 50 per cent of all glass is still landfilled. 40

How a circular economy is supposed to work.

• 45 per cent of all consumer packaging is still landfilled. And the reason is, it is rational to do so. We need to dispense with the myth that if only we “thought” about these materials as resources, that that would somehow fix the problem. The problem is real world economics. Scarcity and demand are not sufficient to compete with cheap landfill. Sure, there are plenty of recyclers doing the right thing and trying to grow their businesses. But they are doing so in the face of massive competition from landfills. Recycling cannot be the default option whilst there are cheap landfills strewn across the country sucking in resources and recyclables. Landfills are mindless. They don’t discriminate between resources and residual waste. A cheap landfill gate fee means cheap disposal. Put it another way, to make the economics work, almost all recycling in Australia is subsidised by someone (except for cardboard and aluminium/ steel which have enough commodity value to overcome the costs of recycling collection and reprocessing). Most mixed stream recyclables are not so valuable. Think kerbside recycling – it is subsidised by ratepayers to the

INSIDEWASTE FEBRUARY/MARCH 2022

tune of $150/tonne. We have no chance of creating a Circular Economy while landfill can outcompete recycling on a daily basis. That is why landfill levies are so important. They have started (and I emphasise started) to level the playing field. The average landfill levy in Europe is A$250/tonne. In Australia, the weighted average levy is $107/tonne. Most of regional Australia has no levy. Who would try to recycle and create jobs under these commercial realities? “What about all the specific streams that are being recycled?” I hear you say. “What about the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes that drive specific stream recycling?” While these are important the common factor is that they all require specific government intervention (the Minister’s List and/or regulation) because the economics don’t work alone. They all require ongoing manufacturer subsidies (paid by you and I). Here are a few facts: 1. Mobile phone recycling has been in place for 21 years. 6.5 million handsets are sold each year. 1.12 million are recycled. That is 17 per cent. Eighty-three per cent are still landfilled (or stored in drawers). 2. Lithium-ion battery recycling is only 10 per cent.

3. S olar panel recycling is less than 10 per cent and almost all are landfilled. 4. TV and computer recycling is around 50 per cent. 5. 42 per cent of waste paint is still landfilled 6. Plastic packaging recycling is 16 per cent. That is 84 per cent of plastic packaging is still landfilled. The target is 70 per cent by 2025. No chance. You get the picture. It would be much easier if the whole economy defaulted to recycling rather than governments having to cherry pick individual streams and regulatory interventions. That means shifting the economics. How? The obvious candidates are landfill levies, tax incentives for recycling, removing virgin commodity subsidies, carbon pricing to value embodied energy, grants and positive procurement policies. These will drive the economics. Governments are trying but just too slowly. All the Governments of Australia (including local government) have signed up to an 80% diversion from landfill target by 2030. That is a critical step in creating a circular economy. But there is no chance of achieving it without reform. The figure below shows where it is broken or needs work.

Daily news updates at www.insidewaste.com.au


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Inside Waste February/March 2022 by Prime Group - Issuu