From Rubbish to Resources: Building a Circular Economy

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

From Rubbish to Resources: Building a Circular Economy PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA From Rubbish to Resources: Building a Circular Economy House of Representatives Standing Committee on Industry, Innovation, Science and Resources December 2020 CANBERRA © Commonwealth of Australia ISBN 978-1-76092-170-5 (Printed Version) ISBN 978-1-76092-171-2 (HTML Version) This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License. The details of this licence are available on the Creative Commons website: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/. Chair's Foreword When we consider our day, from the moment we wake to the time we return to bed, how many times do we engage with the garbage bin beside the fridge? From the obsolescence of your mobile phone to the change in fashion bringing a change in the wardrobe, to the end of the carrots that you don’t want to eat, to the drink bottle you purchased with the pie. All these are disposed of but often that is a euphemism to mean merely placed out of sight. The magic of the disposable society; but the apparition that waste harmlessly disappears, carried away in a truck, is like most magic a mirage. Waste must be managed for hygiene, for the pure necessity that it can’t just lie as litter, arbitrarily scattered around the house and across the fields and over the streets. Waste must be managed for toxins. Waste is an unavoidable by-product of a modern economy that gives us the standard of living we take for granted. This report addresses the dilemma in some way that the rubbish a nation creates in 2020 must be effectively, efficiently and sustainably dealt with by the nation that creates it. No one is going to put up with our garbage anymore. Finding big old holes in the ground to throw it in is a poor reflection of a nation that wishes to present itself as a clever country. Nothing in the universe can be destroyed. We are governed by the law of the conservation of energy and mass. Matter does not disappear it just changes form. Following this rule, we must change the form of rubbish, walking it back up the ladder of utility into its reusable component parts. Organic rubbish can become fertiliser and methane for power. Plastic can become plastic again, steel returns to steel. But some waste is vastly more complex to deal with. How many years has the, at first view, simple task of recycling old tyres alluded us on a wide scale commercial basis? Burying things should be the last option so if you cannot develop the end use technology to recycle then we must iii iv change the initial component parts and technology at the manufacturing of a product. The nation must develop the front-end technology so we can recycle at the end. In this task of waste management, the nation must be effective in delivering a unified approach across states. It would be inefficient and cumbersome for there to be two different policies either side of the Tweed River for instance. Additionally, policy should not reach so far into domestic or small business that the encumbrance and overhead creates, not a vision for a better environment but a resentment against an excessive government. I would like to thank the committee members for their participation and efforts especially Madam Deputy Chair, Sharon Bird, Member for Cunningham. Additionally, I would like to note my deep appreciation for the diligent work of the Secretariat. Hon Barnaby Joyce MP Chair Contents Chair's Foreword .............................................................................................................................. iii Members ............................................................................................................................................ xi Terms of Reference ......................................................................................................................... xiii Abbreviations ................................................................................................................................... xv List of Recommendations .............................................................................................................. xix Executive Summary ...................................................................................................................... xxv The Report 1 Introduction .............................................................................................................. 1 Background ............................................................................................................................ 1 Inquiry process ..................................................................................................................... 2 COVID-19 ................................................................................................................... 2 Commonwealth waste management and recycling reforms .......................................... 3 Structure of the report .......................................................................................................... 5 Acknowledgements .............................................................................................................. 6 2 Waste management and resource recovery ......................................................... 7 What is waste? ....................................................................................................................... 7 Waste statistics ...................................................................................................................... 8 Waste management and resource recovery industry ....................................................... 9 The industry’s activities ......................................................................................... 10 The waste hierarchy ........................................................................................................... 14 v vi Circular economy ............................................................................................................... 16 Shift to a circular economy .................................................................................... 19 National policy ........................................................................................................ 21 Innovation road map .............................................................................................. 23 Committee comment .......................................................................................................... 24 3 Role of the Commonwealth ................................................................................. 27 Current Commonwealth programs .................................................................................. 28 Ban on waste exports .............................................................................................. 29 National Waste Policy Action Plan ...................................................................... 30 Australian Recycling Investment Fund ............................................................... 32 National Plastics Summit ....................................................................................... 32 Response Strategy to COAG Export Bans ........................................................... 33 Commonwealth Procurement Guidelines ........................................................... 34 Recycling Modernisation Fund ............................................................................. 34 Recycling and Waste Reduction Bill .................................................................... 35 National Product Stewardship Investment Fund............................................... 36 Research ................................................................................................................... 37 Committee comment .......................................................................................................... 37 4 Impediments to innovation ................................................................................. 41 Innovation framework ........................................................................................................ 41 Product stewardship .............................................................................................. 43 Evidence to inquiry .................................................................................... 46 Status quo ........................................................................................ 47 Industry-lead schemes ................................................................... 49 Mandatory schemes ....................................................................... 49 Markets and end users ......................................................................................... 53 Procurement policies and standards ........................................................ 55 Auditing and accreditation ....................................................................... 58 Infrastructure investment ...................................................................................... 59 vii Infrastructure gaps and capacity short-falls ........................................... 60 Commonwealth funding ........................................................................... 62 National coordination ............................................................................................ 65 Local councils ............................................................................................
Recommended publications
  • Supporting Australian Smes Go Global
    PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA From little things big things grow: Supporting Australian SMEs go global Inquiry into access to free trade agreements by small and medium enterprises Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade February 2019 CANBERRA © Commonwealth of Australia ISBN 978-1-74366-955-6 (Printed Version) ISBN 978-1-74366-956-3 (HTML Version) This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution- NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Australia License. The details of this licence are available on the Creative Commons website: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/au/. Contents Foreword ......................................................................................................................................... xiii Members ........................................................................................................................................... xv Terms of Reference ....................................................................................................................... xxiii Abbreviations ................................................................................................................................. xxv List of Recommendations ............................................................................................................ xxix The Report 1 Introduction .............................................................................................................. 1 Conduct of the inquiry ........................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Life Education NSW 2016-2017 Annual Report I Have Fond Memories of the Friendly, Knowledgeable Giraffe
    Life Education NSW 2016-2017 Annual Report I have fond memories of the friendly, knowledgeable giraffe. Harold takes you on a magical journey exploring and learning about healthy eating, our body - how it works and ways we can be active in order to stay happy and healthy. It gives me such joy to see how excited my daughter is to visit Harold and know that it will be an experience that will stay with her too. Melanie, parent, Turramurra Public School What’s inside Who we are 03 Our year Life Education is the nation’s largest not-for-profit provider of childhood preventative drug and health education. For 06 Our programs almost 40 years, we have taken our mobile learning centres and famous mascot – ‘Healthy Harold’, the giraffe – to 13 Our community schools, teaching students about healthy choices in the areas of drugs and alcohol, cybersafety, nutrition, lifestyle 25 Our people and respectful relationships. 32 Our financials OUR MISSION Empowering our children and young people to make safer and healthier choices through education. OUR VISION Generations of healthy young Australians living to their full potential. LIFE EDUCATION NSW 2016-2017 Annual Report Our year: Thank you for being part of Life Education NSW Together we worked to empower more children in NSW As a charity, we’re grateful for the generous support of the NSW Ministry of Health, and the additional funds provided by our corporate and community partners and donors. We thank you for helping us to empower more children in NSW this year to make good life choices.
    [Show full text]
  • Lord Mayoral Minute Page 1
    THE CITY OF NEWCASTLE Lord Mayoral Minute Page 1 SUBJECT: LMM 28/05/19 - FEDERAL ELECTION RESULTS MOTION That City of Newcastle: 1 Acknowledges the re-election of the Prime Minister, the Hon. Scott Morrsion MP, and the Federal Liberal National Government, following the 18 May 2019 poll; 2 Notes new and returning Ministerial portfolio responsibilities for a number of Minister’s with responsibility for policy regarding local government, including new Minister for Regional Services, Decentralisation and Local Government, the Hon. Mark Coulton MP, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Development, the Hon. Michael McCormack MP and Minister for Population, Cities and Urban Infrastructure, the Hon. Alan Tudge MP; 3 Congratulates the following local Hunter Members of Parliament on their re-election: • Sharon Claydon MP, Federal Member for Newcastle • Pat Conroy MP, Federal Member for Shortland • Joel Fitzgibbon MP, Federal Member for Hunter • Meryl Swanson MP, Federal Member for Paterson 4 Commits to continuing our collaborative working relationship with the Federal Government and the Federal Labor Opposition for the benefit of the people of the City of Newcastle. BACKGROUND: Following the 2019 Federal election, the Morrison Liberal National Government has formed a majority government. Across Newcastle and the Hunter, all sitting Members of Parliament were returned to represent their communities in the nation’s Parliament. Australians have re-elected our Government to get back to work and get on with the job of delivering for all Australians as they go about their own lives, pursuing their goals and aspirations for themselves, their families and their communities.
    [Show full text]
  • New South Wales. Grant Recipient Alexander Park Dressage Club Inc Ballina Tennis Club Inc. Bar Beach Tennis Club Incorporation B
    New South Wales. Grant Recipient Alexander Park Dressage Club Inc Ballina Tennis Club Inc. Bar Beach Tennis Club Incorporation Beecroft Rugby Club Incorporated Churches Football Association Sydney Inc Cumberland Council Eastwood Ryde netball Association Inc. Eurobodalla Shire Council Evans Head Bombers Rugby League Football Club Football South Coast Limited Forbes Shire Council Goulburn Mulwaree Council Goulburn Railway Tennis Club Inc Grafton Sporting Car Club Inc. Harwood Cricket Club Hawkesbury Sports Council Inc. Highlands District Cricket Association Inc Kemps Creek United Soccer Club La Perouse Local Aboriginal Land Council Lilli Pilli Football Club Inc Lindfield Tennis Club Maitland Rugby Union Football Club Inc. Mangoplah Cookardinia United Eastlakes Football and Netball Club Moruya Tennis Club - under auspices of Moruya Bowling and Recreation Club Mungindi Junior Rugby League INC Muswellbrook Little Athletics Centre Incorporated Nambucca Shire Council Northbridge Sailing Club Ltd Northern Beaches Council Northern Storm Football and Sports Club NSW Biathlon Association Penrith City Council Penrith City Council Police Citizens Youth Club NSW Ltd (PCYC lake macquarie) Police Citizens Youth Clubs NSW Ltd (Singleton) Queenscliff Surf Life Saving Club Ltd Scone Gymnastics Club Incorporated Shoalhaven District Football Association Shoalhaven Heads Chamber of Commerce & Tourism Inc South East Junior Oztag Association Southern Ettalong Football Club St. George Rowing Club St. George Football Association Sydney BMX Club Tamworth Junior
    [Show full text]
  • Gender & Politics 2020: the Path Towards Real Diversity
    Gender & Politics 2020: The path towards real diversity 2020 Update Nick Cater and Nicolle Flint Gender & Politics 2020: The path towards real diversity A Menzies Research Centre Policy Brief Authors: Nick Cater & Nicolle Flint Additonal Research: Holly McDonald Introduction: Nick Cater with Scott Morrison Published by: The Menzies Research Centre Limited RG Menzies House Cnr Blackall and Macquarie Streets BARTON ACT 2600 PO Box 6091 KINGSTON ACT 2604 Executive Director: Nick Cater Phone: 02 6273 5608 Email: [email protected] Designed by: Branded Graphics The Menzies Research Centre Limited is a company limited by guarantee © 2020 THE MENZIES RESEARCH CENTRE DONATIONS TO THE MENZIES RESEARCH CENTRE FUNDS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE To donate go to menziesrc.org/donate ‘There is no reason why a qualified woman should not sit in Parliament or on the Bench or in a professorial Chair or preach from the pulpit, or if you like, command an army in the field.’ Robert Menzies, 19431 1 R G Menzies, ‘Women for Canberra’, Radio Broadcast, 29 January 1943. This paper updates the report first released in 2015 and revised in 2017. It attempts to provide empirical evidence of the extent and nature of the gender imbalance in politics, particularly within the Liberal Party, discuss its consequences and construct an intellectual and philosophical framework to address the disparity based on Liberal principles. The 2015 paper drew from the Menzies Research Centre’s Gender and Politics Forum held in Melbourne on 26 June 2015. It was presented to the federal Women’s Committee Conference in Adelaide on 15-16 August 2015, convened to celebrate the 70th Anniversary of the establishment of the Committee.
    [Show full text]
  • Notice Paper
    11277 LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL NOTICE PAPER No. 133 THURSDAY 16 NOVEMBER 2017 The House meets this day at 10.00 am Contents Business of the House—Notice of Motion ...................................................................................................... 11278 Private Members’ Business ............................................................................................................................. 11279 Items in the Order of Precedence ......................................................................................................... 11279 Items outside the Order of Precedence ................................................................................................. 11282 Government Business—Orders of the Day ..................................................................................................... 11401 Committee Reports—Orders of the Day ......................................................................................................... 11403 Business for Future Consideration .................................................................................................................. 11404 Bills referred to select or standing committees ................................................................................................ 11404 Contingent Notices of Motions ........................................................................................................................ 11405 11278 Legislative Council Notice Paper No. 133—Thursday 16 November 2017 BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE—NOTICE
    [Show full text]
  • Stubbornly Opposed: Influence of Personal Ideology in Politician's
    Stubbornly Opposed: Influence of personal ideology in politician's speeches on Same Sex Marriage Preliminary and incomplete 2020-09-17 Current Version: http://eamonmcginn.com/papers/Same_Sex_Marriage.pdf. By Eamon McGinn∗ There is an emerging consensus in the empirical literature that politicians' personal ideology play an important role in determin- ing their voting behavior (called `partial convergence'). This is in contrast to Downs' theory of political behavior which suggests con- vergence on the position of the median voter. In this paper I extend recent empirical findings on partial convergence by applying a text- as-data approach to analyse politicians' speech behavior. I analyse the debate in parliament following a recent politically charged mo- ment in Australia | a national vote on same sex marriage (SSM). I use a LASSO model to estimate the degree of support or opposi- tion to SSM in parliamentary speeches. I then measure how speech changed following the SSM vote. I find that Opposers of SSM be- came stronger in their opposition once the results of the SSM na- tional survey were released, regardless of how their electorate voted. The average Opposer increased their opposition by 0.15-0.2 on a scale of 0-1. No consistent and statistically significant change is seen in the behavior of Supporters of SSM. This result indicates that personal ideology played a more significant role in determining changes in speech than did the position of the electorate. JEL: C55, D72, D78, J12, H11 Keywords: same sex marriage, marriage equality, voting, political behavior, polarization, text-as-data ∗ McGinn: Univeristy of Technology Sydney, UTS Business School PO Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia, [email protected]).
    [Show full text]
  • ALP Federal Caucus by Factional Alignment February 2021 National NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS NT ACT
    ALP federal caucus by factional alignment February 2021 National NSW VIC QLD SA WA TAS NT ACT House of Reps Right Chris Bowen Richard Marles Jim Chalmers Nick Champion Matt Keogh Luke Gosling David Smith Tony Burke Bill Shorten Shayne Neumann Steve Georganas Madeleine King Jason Clare Mark Dreyfus Milton Dick Amanda Rishworth Joel Fitzgibbon Peter Khalil Anika Wells Ed Husic Anthony Byrne Michelle Rowland Rob Mitchell Sharon Bird Clare O'Neil Justine Elliot Josh Burns Mike Freelander Daniel Mulino Chris Hayes Joanne Ryan Kristy McBain Tim Watts Emma McBride Meryl Swanson Matt Thistlethwaite House of Reps Independent Andrew Leigh Alicia Payne House of Reps Left Anthony Albanese Andrew Giles Terri Butler Mark Butler Josh Wilson Julie Collins Warren Snowdon Pat Conroy Julian Hill Graham Perrett Tony Zappia Anne Aly Brian Mitchell Tanya Plibersek Catherine King Pat Gorman Stephen Jones Libby Coker Susan Templeman Ged Kearney Linda Burney Peta Murphy Anne Stanley Brendan O'Connor Julie Owens Lisa Chesters Fiona Phillips Maria Vamvakinou Sharon Claydon Kate Thwaites Senate Right Kristina Keneally Raffaele Ciccone Anthony ChisholmDon Farrell Pat Dodson Catryna Bilyk Tony Sheldon Kimberley Kitching Alex Gallacher Glenn Sterle Helen Polley Deb O'Neill Marielle Smith Senate Left faction Tim Ayres Kim Carr Murray Watt Penny Wong Sue Lines Carol Brown Malarndirri McCarthy Katy Gallagher Jenny McAllister Jess Walsh Nita Green Louise Pratt Anne Urquhart Total House Reps Right 14 11 4 3 2 0 1 1 36 Total House Reps Left 10 10 2 3 2 2 1 0 30 Total House Reps Indi 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 SuB-total 24 21 6 6 4 2 2 3 68 Total Senate Right 3 2 1 3 2 2 0 0 13 Total Senate Left 2 2 2 1 2 2 1 1 13 SuB-total 5 4 3 4 4 4 1 1 26 ALP Caucus Indi total 2 Left total 43 Right total 49 Total 94.
    [Show full text]
  • REPORT February 2021 This Report Has Been Prepared by Australian Aged Care Collaboration
    Australian Aged Care Collaboration REPORT February 2021 This report has been prepared by Australian Aged Care Collaboration. REPORT VERSION: Final DATE: February 2021 CONTACT DETAILS: Kyle Cox National Campaign Director – Australian Aged Care Collaboration T: +61 481 903 156 | E: [email protected] W: careaboutagedcare.org.au Australian Aged Care Collaboration CONTENTS FOREWORD 5 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 8 KEY STATISTICS 14 SECTION 1 – CHALLENGES IN THE AUSTRALIAN AGED CARE SYSTEM 16 1.1 Funding and financing for aged care 1.2 More than 20 reviews in 20 years – why is the system still failing to meet community expectations? 1.3 Workforce challenges 1.4 COVID-19 SECTION 2 – TYPES OF AGED CARE IN AUSTRALIA 30 2.1 Who provides aged care services? 2.2 Home care and support - for people living in their own home. 2.3 Residential aged care services – for people living in communal homes. 2.3.1 The majority of residential aged care providers are small, not-for-profit organisations SECTION 3 – WHO CAN FIX AUSTRALIA’S AGED CARE SYSTEM? 43 3.1 Critical decision makers 3.2 Everyone can play a part 3.3 Australia’s 30 ‘oldest’ electorates 3.4 The 15 marginal seats from Australia’s 30 ‘oldest’ electorates APPENDIX 53 Full list of Australia’s 151 House of Representatives electorates It’s Time to Care About Aged Care Report - February 2021 3 Australian Aged Care Collaboration FOREWORD Over the past two years, the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety has heard troubling accounts of under-resourcing, neglect, staff shortages and cases of abuse at residential aged care homes.
    [Show full text]
  • Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)
    New South Wales Legislative Assembly PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES (HANSARD) Fifty-Seventh Parliament First Session Wednesday, 23 October 2019 Authorised by the Parliament of New South Wales TABLE OF CONTENTS Visitors ................................................................................................................................................. 1575 Visitors ............................................................................................................................................. 1575 Bills ...................................................................................................................................................... 1575 Fines Amendment Bill 2019 ............................................................................................................ 1575 Returned ....................................................................................................................................... 1575 Electoral Funding Amendment (Local Government Expenditure Caps) Bill 2019 ......................... 1575 First Reading ................................................................................................................................ 1575 Music Festivals Bill 2019 ................................................................................................................ 1575 Second Reading Debate ............................................................................................................... 1575 Consideration in Detail ...............................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • FEDERAL SHADOW MINISTRY 28 January 2021
    FEDERAL SHADOW MINISTRY 28 January 2021 TITLE SHADOW MINISTER OTHER CHAMBER Leader of the Opposition The Hon Anthony Albanese MP Senator the Hon Penny Wong Shadow Cabinet Secretary Senator Jenny McAllister Deputy Leader of the Opposition The Hon Richard Marles MP Shadow Minister for National Reconstruction, Employment, Skills and Small Business The Hon Richard Marles MP Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally Shadow Minister for Science The Hon Richard Marles MP Senator Murray Watt Shadow Minister Assisting for Small Business Matt Keogh MP Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally Shadow Assistant Minister for Employment and Skills Senator Louise Pratt Leader of the Opposition in the Senate Senator the Hon Penny Wong Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs Senator the Hon Penny Wong The Hon Brendan O’Connor MP Shadow Minister for International Development and the Pacific Pat Conroy MP Senator the Hon Penny Wong Shadow Assistant Minister to the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate Senator Jenny McAllister Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Senate Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally Shadow Minister for Home Affairs Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally The Hon Brendan O’Connor MP Shadow Minister for Immigration and Citizenship Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally The Hon Brendan O’Connor MP Shadow Minister for Government Accountability Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally Pat Conroy MP Shadow Minister for Multicultural Affairs Andrew Giles MP Senator the Hon Kristina Keneally Shadow Minister Assisting for Immigration and Citizenship Andrew Giles MP Senator the
    [Show full text]
  • Nsw Labor State Conference 2018 Conference Labor State Nsw
    NSW LABOR STATE CONFERENCE 2018 CONFERENCE LABOR STATE NSW Labor NSW LABOR STATE CONFERENCE 2018 SATURDAY 30 JUNE AND SUNDAY 1 JULY Labor NSW LABOR STATE CONFERENCE 2018 SATURDAY 30 JUNE AND SUNDAY 1 JULY STATE CONFERENCE 2018 CONTENTS Introduction ..........................................................................................................................................................................2 Standing Orders for the 2018 State Conference ...................................................................................................................3 Conference Agenda ..............................................................................................................................................................4 Administrative Committee Members .....................................................................................................................................5 Administrative Committee Meeting Attendances ...............................................................................................................6 Conference Officers ..............................................................................................................................................................8 Members of Party Tribunal and Ombudsman ........................................................................................................................9 Members of Policy Committees ..........................................................................................................................................10
    [Show full text]