Is only 12 per cent of plastic waste recycled in Australia?

Factcheck Team August 09, 2019
Is only 12 per cent of plastic waste recycled in Australia  scaled v4
Empty plastic bottles are packed into trolleys to demonstrate the amount of waste that will be recycled at the launch of a new recycling iniative at a shopping centre in Sydney, Friday, Nov. 13, 2009. The announcement comes in the middle of National Recycling Week, a community education and media campaign to bring attention to recycling and the broader themes of minimising waste. (AAP Image/Tracey Nearmy) NO ARCHIVING

The Statement

Twelve per cent of our plastics are recycled in this country. I think were breaking the faith with Australia. 

Prime Minister Scott Morrison. August 2, 2019. 

The Analysis

Prime Minister Scott Morrison was seeking agreement from state governments on plastic recycling at the first post-election Council of Australian Governments (COAG) meeting on Friday, August 9. Mr Morrison labelled Australias record on recycling appalling and said the current situation was breaking the faith with Australians who were doing the right thing

AAP FactCheck examined Mr Morrisons claim that only 12 per cent of Australias waste plastic was recycled.

The national recycling industry has been under pressure since 2018, when China, the biggest importer of recyclable waste from Australia, placed stringent restrictions on waste imports, effectively closing the door to a large proportion of Australian recycling exports

In August 2019, one of the largest Australian recycling companies SKM collapsed, leaving tens of thousands of tonnes of Victorian kerbside recycling stockpiled and destined largely for landfill

According to the 2018 National Waste Report, prepared for the federal government and released in November 2018, Australia recycled 12 per cent of the 2.5 million tonnes of waste plastic generated in 2016/17 from packaging, construction and industrial sources. The majority of waste plastic - 87 per cent - goes to landfill and just one per cent is used in waste-to-energy facilities.

Another report, the 2017-18 Australian Plastics Recycling Survey commissioned by the Australian, Victorian, New South Wales and West Australian governments and published in January 2019, arrived at a lower 9.4 per cent recycling rate but stated the figure may be conservative as it was based on waste from short-term use such as packaging. 

Having correctly identified the plastics recycling rate as 12 per cent, the PM went on to say: We are not recycling plastics in this country, its going into landfill or its going into boats and being sent up to Asia.  This is not correct, although the rate of local recycling is low.

Of the 320,000 tonnes of waste plastic recycled in 2017/18, 54.5 per cent was exported while the remaining 45.5 per cent was reprocessed in Australia, the Australian Plastics Recycling Survey found. That local reprocessing equates to about four per cent of the plastic Australians consume.

Plastics recycling in Australia includes work undertaken by packaging giant Visy, which reprocesses 95,000 tonnes of plastic each year, largely turning it into food and drink packaging. Coles water bottles, Praise sauce bottles and Schweppes soft drinks all use recycled or semi-recycled packaging from Visy. 

Another Australian company, Replas, turns plastic waste collected in Australia into outdoor products such as bollards, decking furniture and signage.[10]

Based on this evidence, AAP FactCheck found Mr Morrisons claim to be true. The statement that 12 per cent of Australias waste plastic being recycled is supported by data from the 2018 National Waste Report.

The Verdict

True - The checkable claim is true.    

First published August 9, 2019  16:44 AEST

Sources

Fact-checking is a team effort

Every AAP FactCheck article is the result of a meticulous process involving numerous experienced journalists and producers. Our articles are thoroughly researched, carefully crafted and rigorously scrutinised to ensure the highest standard of accuracy and objectivity in every piece.

AAP FactCheck is an accredited member of the International Fact-Checking Network