Home » Recycling programs save

Recycling programs save

Advances at the award-winning Greater Toowoomba Waste Management Facility,
Queensland, have given residents and businesses more opportunities to recycle
household electrical and electronic items, plus bulky polystyrene packaging.

Almost 140 tonnes of e-waste (electronic items) has been diverted from the region’s landfills since June 2019.

In addition, from June this year Council is able to recycle polystyrene packaging material delivered to the facility.

Toowoomba Regional Council Councillor, Rebecca Vonhoff, welcomed residents’ willingness to recycle precious resources.

“Our expanded services deliver environmental savings, relieve some operational business costs and will help Council reach the state government’s waste reduction targets.

“Council’s Toowoomba Region Waste Management Strategy outlines our plans to reduce the volume of waste disposed at landfills and increase the volume of resources that can be recovered and reused.”

Council has achieved a 70 percent diversion rate of material from landfi ll following the opening of the Greater Toowoomba

Waste Management Facility in December 2015.

“There are large costs and strict legislative requirements involved in managing landfi ll operations.

“By diverting recyclable materials from landfills, we can extend the life of our landfill cells and ensure we are not depositing a range of metals and other substances that otherwise have a more valuable future use.”

Councillor, Nancy Sommerfield, said Council recently bought a machine that used heat and pressure to compress expanded polystyrene into ‘bricks’ that would be sold for use in flooring, cladding and other applications.

“Recycling polystyrene will save signifi cant space in our landfill, help to reduce windblown waste and also provide an ongoing revenue stream.

“This is a new product stream for Council and we are among a select group of regional councils using this technology.

“Recycling e-waste also stops a lot of hazardous materials, ranging from heavy metals such as lead and mercury, to ozone-depleting chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and flame retardants, from damaging the environment.”

In a further display of the reduce, reuse and recycle mantra, Council recently recycled piles of crushed concrete that had been left at the facility. The material was used to renew a hardstand pad for housing bulk materials at the site.


Digital Editions


  • Tweed residents gunking up wastewater

    Tweed residents gunking up wastewater

    Tweed Shire Council is urging residents to rethink what they flush down the toilet and pour down the drain, after revealing that crews remove around…

More News

  • Fuel prices hurt country LGAs

    Fuel prices hurt country LGAs

    The fuel crisis is hitting remote, rural and regional communities hard, with farmers, freight carriers, tourism operators and local government all expressing concerns about the lack of supply and the…

  • Navigating grants

    Navigating grants

    How Administrative Complexity Is Eroding One of Local Government’s Most Powerful Tools Local government grants exist to create impact in communities. Yet across the sector, that purpose is increasingly being…

  • Looking to the future

    Looking to the future

    Flinders Lane will be abuzz for two days this month with Townsville Youth Council – supported by Townsville City Council – set to deliver a free festival focused on the…

  • WA leads the way as people to the regions

    WA leads the way as people to the regions

    Ten million people now call regional Australia home, and Western Australia is leading the way with its regional population growing faster than the cities, according to a deep dive into…

  • Sewer grant sought

    Sewer grant sought

    Fraser Coast Regional Council will seek Queensland Government funding for two major water and sewerage projects with capacity to support more than 11,000 new homes across the region. At its…

  • Mayors call for waste levy

    Mayors call for waste levy

    Mayors across NSW have called for waste levy to soften the blow of fuel price increases. More than 60 Councils from across NSW have issued a call for the NSW…

  • Lismore four years on

    Lismore four years on

    Four years on: How Lismore is building back and setting a national benchmark. When the 2022 flood inundated Lismore, it was not simply another extreme weather event. It became Australia’s…

  • A golden celebration

    A golden celebration

    Cockburn Libraries will mark a major milestone in 2026 – 50 years of serving, supporting and connecting the community. Spearwood Library opened its doors on 23 March 1976 as one…

  • Local Governments vital for fuel supply

    Local Governments vital for fuel supply

    Fuel supply constraints and rising costs are putting councils and communities under increasing pressure across Australia, with implications for essential services and community infrastructure. The Australian Local Government Association is…

  • Nathan Daniell elected Mayor of Adelaide Hills Council

    Nathan Daniell elected Mayor of Adelaide Hills Council

    Adelaide Hills Council is pleased to advise that Nathan Daniell has formally been elected Mayor following confirmation of results from the supplementary election. Mr Daniell has served as a councillor…