• CSIRO and Murdoch University are developing 100 per cent compostable bioplastics which can break down in compost, land or water, without leaving a trace. Credit: Murdoch University.
    CSIRO and Murdoch University are developing 100 per cent compostable bioplastics which can break down in compost, land or water, without leaving a trace. Credit: Murdoch University.
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National science agency CSIRO will be investing $50m into its Ending Plastic Waste Mission, pledging to help Australia reduce its plastic waste by 80 per cent over this decade.

Less than 12 per cent of plastic waste is recycled and about 85 per cent ends up in landfill.
CSIRO says that less than 12 per cent of plastic waste is recycled and about 85 per cent ends up in landfill.

Funded through contributions from CSIRO, industry, government, university, and other organisations, the investment will help CSIRO develop innovative scientific solutions to change the way Australia makes, uses, recycles and disposes of plastics.

According to CSIRO, Australians consume one million tonnes of single use plastic each year – with just 12 per cent recycled. Three-quarters of the plastic found along Australia’s coastline is single-use plastics.

With global use of plastic expected to double by 2040, CSIRO’s Chief Executive Larry Marshall said the challenge was far bigger than any one institution and needed a Team Australia approach.

“The Ending Plastic Waste Mission will bring together the whole innovation system, from government, industry and academia to turn science into solutions that will benefit the environment and create economic opportunities for Australia,” Dr Marshall said.

“By working together, by aligning our efforts, and by pushing each other further for a common cause, we can tackle seemingly impossible challenges – like protecting our environment while making sustainability profitable for business. And we can achieve it faster.”

CSIRO says the plastic waste industry is valued globally at about $87 billion and developing circular economy plastic initiatives for recycling is expected to provide US$67 billion in value globally by 2025.

Analysing videos of rivers and stormwater drains can inform intervention efforts.
Analysing videos of rivers and stormwater drains can inform intervention efforts.

“By turning plastic waste into a renewable resource, the Mission will deliver collaborative scientific and manufacturing capabilities to drive new technologies across the entire plastics supply chain and grow Australia’s circular economy,” Dr Marshall said.

Mission lead Dr Deborah Lau said it would take a combination of solutions to address the plastic pollution problem.

“Our mission will be the national catalyst for systematic change to tackle plastic pollution,” Dr Lau said. “It will drive a significant co-ordinated response across the innovation sector and bring science and technology to the forefront to help deliver a myriad of solutions to end plastic waste.”

Research under the Mission includes:

  • Changing the way we make, use, and recycle plastics by developing innovative technologies, materials, products and processes.
  • Supporting a sustainable plastics circular economy by utilising plastic waste to deliver economic benefits, while reducing the detrimental impacts to human health and the environment.
  • Revolutionising packaging and waste systems; generating effective solutions for recycling; advising on the development and implementation of standards; analytics and machine learning to inform decision making; and creating systemic change.

The Mission includes a collaboration between CSIRO and Murdoch University to establish a new Bioplastics Innovation Hub.

Murdoch University Professor Daniel Murphy said the Hub would develop a new generation of 100 per cent compostable products like bottles, caps and wrappers, which currently contribute to the plastic pollution problem.

“Compostable bioplastic demand is predicted to increase rapidly as global concerns around plastic waste and fossil fuel resources increase the importance of bio-based plastic alternatives,” Prof Murphy said.

“Some bioplastics are already in the market but most need UV light to breakdown. Our compostable bioplastics will breakdown in compost, landfill or in water, without leaving a trace."

The first key project for the hub will be working with Ecopha Biotech Pty Ltd to develop a new process for water bottle production using compostable bioplastics derived from waste products from the food industry.

“New bioplastics innovations will provide industry with new commercialisation opportunities and build sustainable and economic opportunities to grow Australia’s bio-manufacturing industries,” Prof Murphy said.

The Ending Plastic Waste Mission brings together CSIRO with government partners Department of Agriculture, Water and the Environment, Department of Foreign Affairs & Trade, Department of Industry, Science, Energy and Resources, NSW Department of Planning Industry and Environment, Parks Australia, NSW Environmental Trust, Sustainability Victoria; along with industry partners Australian Packaging Covenant Organisation, Chemistry Australia, C Sea Solutions, Kimberly-Clark Australia, Circle 8 Clean Technologies, Ostrom Polymers and Phantm; and a number of universities including Monash University, Murdoch University, University of Technology Sydney, University of Queensland, RMIT University, University of Tasmania, and University of Western Australia. 

The Mission is also partnering with a number of international organisations including the National Science Foundation, University of Texas at Austin and U.S. Department of Energy's BOTTLE Consortium.

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