Business Telegraph

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The Times Real Estate

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A Smarter and More Sustainable Way to Clean Up Illegal Tips

  • Written by Andrea Edwards

It’s estimated there could be thousands of illegal dump sites across the country that are potential health and environmental hazards.

SoilCyclers Alison Price said they can be anywhere and cost communities millions of dollars to clean them up.

“Standard practice to clean-up these sites is to come in pick it all up, load it into trucks and take it to landfill,” Ms Price said.

“But there is a smarter, more sustainable way to sift through the waste and potentially reuse it back on the site,” she said.

“The way we do this is to firstly test the materials, so we know what contaminants are there and then work out how to reuse the materials so it’s not just ending up in landfill.”

“Importantly we also sort the various materials such as wood, metal, plastics and tyres and send them for recycling.”

“An example where this was done is the old Petrie Paper Mill site, there we were faced with 140,000m3 of soil contaminated with plastic left from a former tenant who was attempting to run a recycling business.”

“We were able to separate the plastic from the soil meaning just 18,000m3 of waste went to landfill and 87% of the materials were able to be reused on the site.”

‘This enabled the former industrial site to be sold to the government and is currently being transformed into a Sunshine Coast University campus.”

“On another site in Byron Bay we found a bag of money and 14 bras spread across the area.”

“Over the years we’ve pretty much found everything except a body.”

“We’ve had a special drum made to deal with construction and demolition waste, it’s much thicker and made of a harder type of metal and is designed for bulky items.”

“I’ve seen them feed everything into the drum from a mattress to a shopping trolley and even concrete footings with signposts still attached.”

“With a waste levy coming to Queensland it’s important for businesses to work smarter, we have better machinery and science than we’ve ever had before and there are definitely ways to reduce the 2.1 million tons of construction waste that go to landfills in Queensland each year.”

The benefits of doing the clean-up differently;

  • Less trucks on the roads; To clean-up a site with 35,000 cubic metres of waste it would traditionally take 1750 big trucks ferrying the waste to landfill. By reusing some back on site that can be reduced by up to 85% down to 262 truckloads.
  • Less cost; By reducing trucks on the roads by 85% that is a potential saving of $500,000 and is also better for the roads and the environment.
  • Less material into landfill; Reusing some of these waste materials back on site you can potentially divert almost 12 Olympic swimming pools of waste from landfill.

 

“Not much has changed in the industry for a really long time but technology has advanced, and we should be using it to get a better outcome for the environment.”

“It’s important to know there’s another option for dealing with these illegal dump sites, you don’t just have to truck it away to landfill because that’s what has always been done.”

“Often people just think it’s a big mess and let’s get rid of it, but there are alternatives if you are willing to be a bit innovative about the way you do things.”

For more information about smarter and more sustainable ways to deal with illegal dump sites go to www.soilcyclers.com.au

More about Alison Price

Alison Price is the founder and Managing Director of SoilCyclers Pty Ltd, Queensland’s largest mobile soil recycling, decontamination, amelioration and waste reduction business. Last year, Alison oversaw recycling projects on more than 50 sites, processing almost half a million cubic metres of material, saving clients more than $5 million and taking almost 30, 000 truckloads off local roads. Alison enjoys helping other women connect, collaborate and grow in the construction industry and is the current President of the Queensland Chapter of the National Association of Women in Construction (NAWIC), as well as a board member for the Waste Recycling Industry Association of Queensland (WRIQ).

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