Waste Management Review December 2019

Page 22

FEATURED TOPIC – ORGANICS

Giving back to the land BRISBANE AIRPORT HAS INSTALLED AN ENRICH360 DEHYDRATOR AT ITS SKYGATE PRECINCT, ENABLING IT TO REACH ITS LANDFILL DIVERSION TARGETS AND MOVE TOWARDS A CIRCULAR ECONOMY.

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ast year’s announcement of the waste levy in Queensland created a new business case for Brisbane Airport. With the levy stimulating additional demand for resource recovery solutions, Brisbane Airport began to look at diverting some of its most prominent waste streams. Having previously conducted audits into its incoming tonnages, the airport knew food waste was its second biggest input after glass. Moreover, the airport has a target to divert 80 per cent of its total waste from landfill by 2030, with food waste emerging as the low hanging fruit. Andrew Masci, Environment & Sustainability Adviser, says the airport decided to investigate and identify a suitable food waste service. He says that this was its first foray into nonstandard commingled recycled, with the airport also participating in the QLD

Government Container Refund Scheme. In a six-month investigation process, enrich360 emerged as the most suitable choice, with its food dehydrator arriving in February this year and timing well with the levy’s 1 July start date. Launched in late 2017, enrich360’s program uses a dehydrator to condense food waste into recycled water and biomass that can be utilised as fertiliser or as part of compost. The model is established on a closed loop system where restaurants and food service businesses across the country convert their food waste into rich organic fertiliser to give back to farmers and grow better, more nutritious produce. The benefits lead to more resources being recovered while replenishing globally scarce nutrients and improving Australia’s low food waste recovery rate. The process works to reduce the volume of food waste by up to 93 per cent and create a sterile and pathogen-

Enrich360 is getting buy-in from a range of businesses, including retail, restaurants, food outlets and universities.

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free material. In a closed loop reverse logistics process, logistics partner In2food picks up the materials during their usual drop-off route and delivers them to farms. Brisbane Airport’s Skygate Precinct was chosen as the ideal location for a trial of the dehydrator as it was not too busy and included a range of food outlets in the area. Enrich360’s suitability centred on Brisbane Airport’s desire to ensure its food waste would always find a home, ensuring it did not go to landfill when the airport didn’t have an end-to-end solution. “Brisbane Airport is transitioning to a circular economy and that is why enrich360 grabbed our attention. There were different dehydrators in the market, but none offered the full service,” Andrew says. “It took three months to kick off with a few teething issues, but now we are getting amazing results.” The results speak for themselves, with enrich360 diverting 5500 kilograms of food waste since commencing its trial in February. Andrew says that around 11 retailers have so far participated in the program. He say the dehydrator is able to detect whether it is overfilled and unfilled. Depending on moisture content, it takes roughly 10 to 12 hours to produce the biomass. He says that participating retailers


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