The Bega Valley is attempting to become Australia's most circular economy. 
Bega's bid to become a circular economy to reduce waste
Barry Irvin is the boss of the iconic cheese making Bega Group.(ABC Landline)

In short:

The Bega Valley is attempting to become Australia’s most circular economy.

In a circular economy, what would normally be a waste product is used again so fewer resources are needed.

What’s next?

The group behind the push hopes what is learnt in Bega can become a blueprint for the rest of Australia.

Bega will become Australia’s most circular economy by 2030 if ambitious Australian businessman Barry Irvin has his way.

When Mr Irvin took over running Bega Cheese in 1991 it was a small dairy cooperative.

Now called Bega Group, the listed food company Bega has a $3 billion annual turnover.

Mr Irvin said it was a light-bulb moment when he first heard about the concept of circularity.

“Once you see it you can’t unsee it,” he said.

A paddock of dairy cows on rolling hills

The Bega Valley is known for its dairy production.(ABC Landline: Pip Courtney)

He was converted after a Dutch banker explained how the Netherlands was leading the world in adopting low emission, sustainable circular practices.

“Circularity’s a virtuous circle where everybody wins, and that’s from an economic, social and environmental point of view,” Mr Irvin said.

He has spent the last two years convincing leaders in business, government and academia to support Australia’s biggest circularity experiment.

A graphic explaining circular economy

The Netherlands is one of the leading countries in the world when it comes to moving from a linear to circular economy.(ABC News)

“We could get 30 per cent of the economy circular by then [2030], and 50 per cent within a decade,” Mr Irvin said.

“We need to catch up with the types of targets the Europeans have.

“In the Netherlands for example the target isn’t net zero by 2050, it’s to be a fully circular economy by 2050.”

What is a circular economy?

Countries in Europe are leading the world in moving from linear economies where goods are single-use only to circular ones, where resources are continuously recycled and re-used.

Lisa McLean explains the concept of a circular economy.(ABC Landline)

“It’s about keeping materials in the economy for as long as possible at their highest value, designing out waste and pollution, and then regenerating natural systems,” Circularity Australia CEO Lisa McLean said.

Ms McLean said Australia couldn’t reach net zero without going circular.

The Bega Valley Shire Council was an enthusiastic participant of the circularity project.

It already runs a recycling centre and a weekly organic waste Food and Garden Organics (FOGO) collection service.

A rubbish truck unloading organic waste

The Food and Garden Organics truck operating at the Bega Valley Shire Council’s waste facility.(ABC Landline: Pip Courtney)

Last year 1,000 tonnes of methane-producing food and garden waste were diverted from landfill.

But despite almost half of the region’s waste being recycled or composted, 19,000 tonnes of rubbish was sent to landfill last year.

“Unfortunately that number’s increasing, and it’s increasing larger than our population growth,” said Tim Cook, the council’s waste strategy coordinator.

“So what that tells us is here, per person, our residents are becoming more wasteful.”

Mr Cook said the amount of landfill waste could be cut from 52 per cent to single digits if the community supported the circularity project by changing behaviour.

Advancing efforts

A range of other waste streams in the Bega Valley were already being reused.

The Bega Group’s dairy factory boiler ran on wood waste, with the fly ash residue used as a lime replacement on pastures.

It has saved the company $200,000 a year in landfill fees.

Woman with a hair net on touching seaweed

Pia Windberg says there is a lot of untapped potential in the seaweed industry.(ABC Landline)

A new evaporator, extracting milk minerals worth $5,000 a tonne from liquid whey waste, paid for itself in year, and 1.2 million litres of waste water daily irrigates hay pastures.

Seaweed researcher Pia Windberg would like to see the factory’s waste water put to a high-value use with the development of onshore seaweed farms.

“We’ve already ironed out the whole process of growing a unique Australian green seaweed, we know how to dry it, we know how to put it into foods, and we’ve actually just achieved our first export,” Dr Windberg said.

A collage of two images showing sea urchins and a pile of compost

Bega is beginning to be more circular with a business collecting seafood waste like sea urchins to create fertiliser.(ABC Landline: Pip Courtney)

“It should be at least as big as 10 per cent of the wheat industry.

“We really haven’t scratched the surface of this opportunity.”

A $19-million National Centre for Circularity will be built in Bega in the next two years.

Bega Group donated $5 million and the New South Wales government the remainder.

The former mayor Kristy McBain, now the federal minister for regional development, said if anyone could bring about lasting change, it was Mr Irvin with his strong connections in the community.

“They’ve got Rabobank on board, KPMG, Deloitte, Charles Sturt University, University of Wollongong, the local council, the state government and the federal government at the table,” she said.

Mr Irvin said the shire was perfect for the trial.

“There’s one council, one airport, and just two roads in and out; we can measure everything in this valley,” he said.

“We can prove things up really quickly, we can also prove that things failed and didn’t work really quickly, then we can share that knowledge.

“I kind of want to make people jealous, I want to make people come to the Bega Valley and go, ‘We should be like that, we should be doing that’.”

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It’s no secret that agriculture is one of Idaho’s biggest economic drivers, as it’s worth billions of dollars.

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