Subscribe to Newsletter

logo

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Home
  • Home
  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
  • Trending
  • Business Insight
  • Events
  • Magazine
  • Advertise
  • Contact

A circular economy roadmap for plastics, paper and glass in Australia

27 Jan, 2021
Reduce single-use paper and address the leakage from low value fibre. © Bas Emmen on Unsplash


A new roadmap released by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) has developed key strategies for creating jobs and reclaiming billions in economic value from plastic, glass, paper and tyres currently going into landfill.

The National Circular Economy Roadmap found innovation is crucial to realising Australia’s largest economic gains, which will come from designing new products and materials, including through advanced manufacturing, and in embracing new business models that will create domestic and export markets for waste streams.

This could more than triple job creation from resource recovery in Australia, where the recycling sector currently generates 9.2 jobs per 10,000 tonnes of waste, compared with only 2.8 jobs for the same amount of waste sent to landfill.

Increasing Australia’s recovery rate by just 5 per cent would add an estimated $1 billion to GDP.

The Australian Government’s ban on the export of waste last year creates an opportunity for a new circular economy strategy that turns landfill into economic returns.

CSIRO Chief Executive, Dr Larry Marshall, said science and technology can drive Australia’s next wave of economic opportunities.

“Australia is among the world’s best in advanced manufacturing and environmental research, and that unique science can turn industry and environment into partners by making sustainability profitable,” he commented.

“Science can transform our economy into a circular one that renews and reuses what we previously discarded, and indeed a virtuous circle that creates higher paid jobs, advances new Australian technology, and protects our environment.”

“We’re on a mission to make it real. The practical path laid out in this roadmap is part of CSIRO’s mission-led focus on using science to solve our greatest challenges while driving our economic recovery and building future resilience,” Dr Marshall added.

The roadmap aligns with a number of circular economy missions being developed by CSIRO and partners in industry, universities and government, including a mission to end plastic waste, a mission to transform Australian mineral commodities into higher-value products, and a mission to transition to net-zero emissions.

Project leader, Dr Heinz Schandl, said the roadmap was commissioned by the Federal Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources and developed in collaboration with 83 industry, research and government partners to shape a circular economy strategy for Australia to address fundamental environmental issues and foster regional employment.

“Our traditional ‘take-make-dispose’ consumption pattern is hitting two walls: ever-more-expensive primary materials, and ever-more-unacceptable ways of dealing with waste,” Dr Schandl said.

“The global pandemic has disrupted global supply chains which challenges Australia to be self-sufficient with sovereign manufacturing capability.”

 

The roadmap identifies six elements for moving towards a circular economy of plastics, paper, glass and tyres:

  1. Retain material through use and collection
  2. Upscale and innovate recycling technologies
  3. Innovate and collaborate in design and manufacture
  4. Develop markets for secondary materials and the products that use them
  5. Streamline nationally consistent governance
  6. Secure a national zero waste culture

 

Lost to landfill: The hidden gems in our waste

Plastic – $419M: Australia loses $419 million every year by not recycling PET and HDPE plastics.

Paper – $115M: Cost savings from sending paper fibre to landfill is around $70 per tonne. With 1,642 kilotonnes sent to landfill each year, that’s $115 million.

Lithium – $2.5B: Sending lithium from batteries to landfill results in a lost economic opportunity of up to $2.5 billion by 2036.

Litter – $70M: Australia spent $70 million cleaning up dumped waste in 2016–17.

Share this story

  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook

Related Articles

ReGen 2026

2nd International Conference on Recycling and Waste Management

2nd International Conference on Recycling and Waste Management

Connecting Hydrogen APAC 2025

Australia Wind Energy 2025

Comments

Leave a comment Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Breaking

  • Energy
  • Construction
  • Resources
27 Feb

CER tightens safety standards for solar batteries with a zero-tolerance approach

26 Feb

Flinders get funding for quantum project aimed at improving remote energy

25 Feb

CSIRO upgrades facility to advance tests of new renewable technology

24 Feb

Tarong West wind farm gets federal environmental approval

24 Feb

Nike warehouse unveils rooftop solar in shape of iconic branding

25 Feb

Western Australia to build new water pipeline to enable sustainable supply in Guilderton

25 Feb

Policy shift in Victoria promotes efficient land use

25 Feb

Recycled glass strengthens construction’s circular future

18 Feb

NSW government introduces new policy to tackle climate risks for new homes

18 Feb

Cities experiment to tackle climate challenges

06 Mar

HAMR Energy fuels Australia’s aviation decarbonisation

27 Feb

Kwinana to host Australia’s first industrial-scale clean energy transformation hub

26 Feb

ARENA funds Queensland startup for copper production pilot

26 Feb

Recycler fined for export of undeclared e-waste to Singapore

26 Feb

ARENA backs MGA Thermal to decarbonise industry

Online Magazine

    Current Cover
  • Login
  • Subscribe

Subscribe

Subscribe to Newsletter

Our Titles

  • Share on Newsletter
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy
© Sage Media Group 2026 All Rights Reserved.
×
Authorization
  • Registration
 This feature has been disabled
 This feature has been disabled until further notice, however you may still register
×
Registration
  • Autorization
Register
* All fields required