Skip to main content
Creating a circular economy for plastics in Geelong
Id est velit laboriosam possimus quae sunt fuga et vero suscipit minus. Eos quisquam beatae excepturi sequi eaque ut aut. Autem quidem odit soluta tempore minus facilis eveniet nihil aliquid. Explicabo porro dolores tenetur consequatur rerum nostrum.
14/04/2022
Old plastic items are broken down into pellets which can be made into new items
Want to read more stories like this?  Sign up for our Rethink Your Rubbish e-news delivered at the start of every month.

Outdoor furniture garden pots worm farms and roadside bollards are just some of the products being created from recycled plastic with every stage of the recycling process happening right here in Victoria.

It all starts at Moolap-based GT Recycling where broken wheelie bins car bumpers kids' swimming pools washing baskets garden pots and other end-of-life items made from plastic types PP LDPE and HDPE are processed into a pellet form and on sold to Victorian manufacturers.

The manufacturers then use the pellets as a virgin material substitute which is melted down to create a range of new products.

How is plastic recycled at GT Recycling?

Plastic waste is loaded onto a conveyor belt and fed into a shredder which reduces the size of the material down to fist size pieces. It then goes through a granulation process further reducing the plastic to fingernail size pieces followed by a decontamination process to remove dirt and other non-plastic waste.

After this the material is fed into an extruder that melts the material and produces the finished raw material in small pellet form which is bagged and ready for dispatch.

“When something like a wheelie bin is delivered to the recycling facility it could be recycled and transformed into a new wheelie bin within a week ” said GT Recycling Business Development Manager Brett McLean.

The majority of plastic processed by GT Recycling is factory waste from local businesses however items like household plant pots  buckets storage containers kids’ hard plastic swimming pools and washing baskets dropped off at the City’s Drysdale and North Geelong Resource Recovery Centres are sent to GT for recycling. 

What other plastics can I recycle?

Many hard plastics that cannot be put in your recycling bin can be dropped off at Geelong Resource Recovery Centre at 100 Douro Street. These include most objects made completely of plastic: chairs kid's swimming pools and toys plant pots and more. See the full list.

CDs and DVDs including their cases can also be recycled. These can be dropped off at libraries and customer service centres.

Creating a circular economy for plastic waste in Geelong

Brett said the recycled plastic pellets replaced the need for manufacturers to draw on virgin material  much of which is imported. 

“Everything we produce in Geelong is used by Victorian manufacturers and the new product can be recycled over and over again. A lot of stuff that reaches end-of-life from Bunnings for example comes back here and turns into new products sold in Bunnings so it’s a real loop.”

“We currently recycles thousands of tonnes of waste plastics per annum which will increase once the plastic waste export ban comes into place mid-year at which time our processing capacity will double ” he said.

Supporting a local recycling industry

A local company employing 30 people GT Recycling is looking forward to expanding and recycling more here in Geelong.

It will soon start onsite recycling of softer industrial plastics such as pallet wraps and retail packaging (made from LDPE) which will be made into products like garbage bags irrigation pipe and slip sheets that can be used as an alternative to timber pallets.

Published On

14/04/2022

 

Old plastic items are broken down into pellets which can be made into new items

Old plastic items are broken down into pellets which can be made into new items

Brett from GT Recycling with some of the items they recycle

Brett from GT Recycling with some of the items they recycle