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CEFC commits $75 million in finance to develop C&D recycling facility

24 Apr, 2023
Demolition of building. Excavator breaks old house. Freeing up space for construction of new building


The CEFC is committing $75 million in debt finance to develop what will be Queensland’s flagship construction and demolition (C&D) recycling facility at Rino Recycling, substantially boosting Australia’s recycling sector and expanding onshore recycling capabilities.

Operated by Rino Recycling and strategically located in Pinkenba, between the Brisbane CBD and Airport, the $89 million facility is expected to deliver 55,363tCO2-e of carbon abatement annually, equivalent to taking almost 12,000 cars off the road. With a recovery rate of more than 90 per cent, it will produce higher quality recycled products for re-use.

The new integrated plant – one of Australia’s largest for throughput volume under one roof – will be able to process more than one million tonnes of C&D waste annually, including concrete, excavation material, vacuum waste and skip bin waste, diverting a significant amount of valuable resources from landfill.

The CEFC investment is the single largest to be made via its $100 million Australian Recycling Investment Fund.

CEFC CEO Ian Learmonth said the investment helps provide a solution to Australia’s growing waste stream and accelerates the transition to a circular economy by deploying best-in-class technology to further develop Australia’s recycling sector.

“It offers an opportunity to deliver important infrastructure to Queensland and comes at a critical time for Brisbane, with the city on the cusp of a construction boom in the count down to the 2032 Olympics.”

Rino Recycling Director Todd Pepper said: “Brisbane is expected to continue the trend in significant population growth over the next 20 years, in addition to the construction requirements of the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games. The city has a significant pipeline of infrastructure development, including expansion of the Brisbane Airport and the development of the Brisbane city region in the SEQ ‘City deal’. The potential for recycling building material in these construction projects is very large.

“The introduction of the landfill levy by the Queensland Government in 2019, and their commitment to almost double it by 2027, has enabled us to make this investment in this proven technology. This facility will not only help SEQ achieve its Olympics commitments but preserve a number of its finite resources by recycling existing materials in the system first.”

The new facility will help address the under-developed C&D recycling sector in Southeast Queensland, using leading global recycling technology by Turmec from Ireland and CDE from Northern Ireland.

Rino Recycling General Manager Daniel Blaser said: “The design philosophy behind this state-of-the-art facility is to not only deliver world leading recovery rates, but to create the highest quality outputs as value-add products to the building, construction and manufacturing industries.

“What is unique about this plant is that it is fully automated and able to handle many and various waste streams through the plant efficiently, separating the products effectively and creating valuable outputs without the need to rehandle or reprocess. The new integrated plant is one of Australia’s largest for throughput volume under one roof, is the first of its type, and will help Brisbane create a more sustainable Olympics.”

CEFC Industrials Lead Mac Irvine said: “This project marks a significant development for Australia’s circular economy and for recycling in Queensland. Output products like recycled aggregates, road bases and sands/soils can be used in place of virgin products to create opportunities for lower embodied carbon content in construction projects.

“As we look to deliver a net zero emissions economy by 2050, we need to cut emissions wherever they occur, from the way we build to the way we recycle. This facility demonstrates how to unlock the untapped value of what is considered ‘waste’ to deliver a more sustainable low-emissions built environment.”

Less than a third of all construction and demolition waste around the world is recovered and reused. According to Australia’s National Waste Report 2022, 29 million tonnes of waste came from the C&D sector last year, amounting to 38 per cent of all waste generated in Australia, a significant proportion of which is sent to landfill.

The Brisbane facility investment brings CEFC lifetime commitments across the waste and bioenergy sectors to more than $560 million.

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