NSW flood waste adds to Queensland’s recycling problem

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NSW flood waste adds to Queensland’s recycling problem
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Most of the increasing interstate waste came from NSW after flooding in February 2022. Read more here:

Interstate waste trucked to Queensland increased by one-third last financial year, despite a $95 per tonne waste levy.

“Close to 460,000 tonnes of waste were received from interstate sources by reporting entities in Queensland,” the report states.“[That] is a 33 per cent increase from the 345,000 tonnes reported in 2020-21. The increase was driven by the transfer of 170,000 tonnes of flood disaster waste from New South Wales.”

But Queensland is not meeting its targets to divert council waste – biodegradable material, and recyclable materials such as bottles, paper, cardboard and aluminium cans – from landfill.By 2025 Queensland aims to divert 55 per cent of this type of waste from landfill, but on the latest count the state was diverting 27.3 per cent.

Some of that $350 million will have been tapped for the state government’s $20 million contribution to a $40 million scheme to fund three new recycling projects.

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