Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsAI helps cut emissions

AI helps cut emissions

Innovative machines and artificial intelligence (AI) technology are significantly reducing emissions at Noosa’s Eumundi Road Landfill facility.

In a boost to Council’s war on waste, Noosa councillors last Tuesday officially launched a new polystyrene thermal processing machine and Containers for Change reverse vending machine.

“We’re very proud of this,“ Mayor Clare Stewart said. “This will save Noosa Council $380,000 per year. It was a $300,000 investment.

“With this technology, we can process polystyrene in-house, sparing an estimated 50 tonnes – the equivalent of two Olympic swimming pools – of polystyrene from ending up in our landfill each year. What this machine will do, it will reduce that amount of polystyrene by 90 per cent. That means far less going into landfill.

“Also that 90 per cent of polystyrene is part of the circular economy. It’s reused. It’s reused for decking, reused for picture frames.

“It’s a huge impost, polystyrene, on our landfill. This machine will go a long way to reducing the impacts of landfill and the concerns around that. We know 60 per cent of emissions come from landfill. This is huge ammunition in our war on waste.”

“We saw in February 2022 with the pontoons that washed ashore in Noosa during the floods, just how environmentally destructive polystyrene can be to Noosa, so this thermal compactor is a real game-changer.”

The thermal compactor works by heating up polystyrene waste and compressing it into small, solid bricks. This process reduces the material’s size by 90 per cent, making it more manageable and cost-effective to transport for repurposing into new products.

Waste Services manager Kyrone Dodd encouraged residents to make use of the facility and contribute to the circular economy.

“Unfortunately, people can’t put polystyrene in their yellow lidded bins, but we do encourage them to store it and bring it to Noosa’s Eumundi Road facility so it can be repurposed rather than sent to landfill,” he said.

Mr Dodd said now the machine was up and running, the Council would be working on locating different suppliers and the best prices for the recycled polystyrene and expect to be able to sell the material for reuse for about $400 a ton.

Gympie Council has also come on board with the technology and committed to sending its polystyrene for processing as part of the newly signed Waste Memorandum of Understanding agreement between the two councils.

The installation of a Reverse Vending Machine (RVM) as part of the Containers for Change container refund scheme is proving popular at the Eumundi Road Landfill facility.

In a partnership with Ecoboxtec, the RVM has a combination of four identification methods, including shape recognition using AI, developed at Peregian Beach Digital Hub, to accept eligible drink containers.

Ecoboxtec director Julien Craeye said the easy-to-use machine reduces handling, logistics and CO2 emissions.

“This is the first one in Australia, the first in Queensland. It’s been manufactured in Queensland,” he said.

“What this machine does is it collects material, it separates material and it reduces the size of material at a rate of 30 bottles per minute.We’ve started collecting every day on this site. We also work alongside Containers for Change and make sure the community has easy access to this machine and recycling.

“We have received incredible positive feedback from users who find it quick and convenient in processing rink containers for a refund.

“Recycling one tonne of aluminium cans through the machine saves 6.8 tonnes of CO2 emissions.“

Cr Stewart said Council was tackling waste head-on and identifying opportunities to turn waste into a resource.

“These two new machines are tangible examples of how Council is diverting recyclable material from landfill to both reduce emissions and conserve landfill space,” she said.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Ready for anything

It was an emergency. Floodwaters had cut off the North Shore ferry. A woman was in labour. Paramedics couldn’t get across. And time was running...

New lights are ace

Let’s save Tessa

More News

Let’s save Tessa

A Sunshine Coast family is racing against time to give their six-year-old daughter, Tessa, a chance at life, as the community rallies behind an...

Young speedster sprung

A 17-year-old provisional licence holder has been intercepted allegedly travelling 189km/h in a 100km/h zone on the Sunshine Motorway at Mountain Creek, just after...

Most welcoming town in Australia

Noosa Heads has been named one of the Top 10 Most Welcoming Towns on Earth, and the only Australian destination to make the global...

Warning over illegal dumping

Illegal dumping of garden waste across Noosa’s bushland, reserves and national parks is causing serious and long-lasting environmental damage, Noosa Council has warned. While dropping...

Remembering Gwen

Gwendoline “Gwen” Torney, a cherished member of the Noosa community for more than four decades, passed away peacefully on Sunday, January 25. Her vibrant...

Mortgages on the rise

Noosa residents and local hospitality businesses are set to feel the squeeze following the Reserve Bank of Australia’s first interest rate rise of 2026....

First grade take the one day flag

1st Grade One Day Semi Final The One Day semi-final against Glasshouse was another big test. With the bat, Mick and Samadhi again got us off...

February fires up with events

From sporting action to lantern-lit nights on the lake, February is shaping up as an exciting month on the Sunshine Coast events calendar. Locals and...

Choirboys bring rock n roll to Noosa

Back in 1978, a group of twenty-something mates from Sydney’s Northern Beaches formed a band called Choirboys. Surrounded by the wild, hedonistic chaos of...

Pressure on provider

Katie Rose Cottage Hospice has temporarily suspended patient admissions as funding shortfalls and revised government timelines place growing pressure on the Noosa-based end-of-life care...