Department of Defence - Australia

The challenge


Assist organizations that have to meet the daily challenges dictated by their activities in their strategy for sustainable environmental management, rational use of resources and pollution prevention. As is the case with defence authorities in most countries, they are often major employers, large landowners and heavy consumers of natural resources.

 

Customer objectives

The Australian Department of Defence is working to reduce its environmental impact in terms of waste - more than 10,000 metric tons generated per year - on each of its 377 military sites. And, more specifically, is working to ensure the sustainable disposal of more than 40,000 used tyres every year (for a fleet of more than 6,000 light, medium and heavy vehicles).

 

Veolia's solution


Veolia's expertise in waste enables it to deploy the best recycling practices: waste management, resource recycling and recovery (paper, cardboard, glass, mixed plastics, aluminium and other metals), liquid and hazardous waste disposal, security-related document destruction, aviation fuel recycling and reuse. The Group also contributes to the initiative led by the Australian accreditation body, Tyre Stewardship Australia (TSA), for recycling used tyres.

 

Innovation

Veolia has joined the TSA program, which brings its expertise in safe and environmentally friendly recovery and treatment of end-of-life tyres. The TSA provides an industry framework authorized by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission to effectively reduce the number of scrap tyres sent to landfill in Australia or inappropriately or illegally exported. This responds to the objectives of the Department of Defence's end-of-life tyre action plan (56 million passenger equivalent units per year in Australia) which applies to all disposals of vulcanised rubber from army vehicles and those leased by the Department across the country.

 

8,000

collection bins distributed to military sites and 11 additional collection vehicles in Veolia’s fleet

377

Defence department sites identified

40,000

average annual volume of used tyres that have to be disposed of sustainably

 

 

Customer benefits


Environmental performance

Reduce the amount of material going to landfill

Increase resource recovery and reduce the environmental impacts of disposing of end-of-life tyres

Strictly comply with the requirements of the EPBC* law for all tyre sales (ground and aerospace)

* Australia's Environmental Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999, which provides a legislative and regulatory framework for Commonwealth organizations to enable them to pursue ecologically sustainable development and environmental performance

 

Economic performance

The low national end-of-life tyre recycling rate (around 5%) is costly for the community and public authorities as tyres pollute natural landscapes and waterways and overburden landfill sites. By collecting and treating all the used tyre waste from the Defence Department, the cost of repairing the damage is reduced by the same amount.

 

Social performance

Veolia works closely with local communities - suppliers, job seekers, subcontractors, etc. - near military sites and waste treatment facilities with a view to creating jobs in the various regions concerned.

Contrat scope

Site : 377 sites identified

Equipment : bins + collection vehicles

Contract period

6 years (2014-2020) + 4 years extension

Sector of activity

Commercial


Expertise

Recovery of tyre waste in three main forms:

energy recovery (in cement works)

material recovery (aggregates for various uses)

reuse (second-hand tyres)

Planet

Tyre Stewardship Australia (TSA), an industry-funded non-profit corporation, is responsible for implementing and driving the Tyre Product Stewardship Program. Every year, approximately 56 million units reach the end of their life in Australia. A large number of tyres are currently disposed of in landfills, stored, and exported, but only around 5% are recycled. The industry initiative aims to increase domestic tyre recycling, support new technologies, expand the market for tyre products and reduce the number of end-of-life tyres going to landfill.

People 

The contract with the Department of Defence is a long-term boost to the Reconciliation Action Plan, which aims to achieve 2.5% employment for Australians by 2021. Conceived in 2014 by Veolia and the NGO Outback Academy Australia (OAA), the plan aims to reduce inequalities between indigenous and non-indigenous people by promoting initiatives to improve employment opportunities for and social inclusion of indigenous people.