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Posts by Transition Gawler

Minimise food waste this Christmas

With the festive season upon us, give some thought to minimising the amount of food you waste.

Each year, Australians send four million tonnes of food to landfill – enough to fill 450,000 garbage trucks.

When food rots without air in landfill it gives off the greenhouse gas methane, which is 25 times more damaging to the environment than the carbon dioxide that comes out of your car exhaust.

Australians waste $8 billion worth of fresh food, leftovers, packaged and long-life products, drinks, frozen food, and takeaways a year.

For the average South Australian household, that equates to 20% of the food they purchase. That’s the same as just throwing away one out of every five bags of groceries you buy without even bringing it into the house.

Over a year that can be as high as around $1000 worth of food that gets wasted – that’s enough to feed the average household for over a month, and at this time of year especially if we think about being smarter about our food waste then there’s more money in your pocket and benefits for the environment.

When you throw out food you also waste the water, fuel and resources it took to get the food from the farm to your plate, so it’s not just your hip pocket that wins when you avoid wasting food, the environment wins too.

Here are some simple steps to reduce this waste:

  • Only cook what you need. Food is often wasted when we cook too much.
  • Use a website like foodwise.com.au to find out inventive ways to use leftovers.
  • Check the use-by or best before date before throwing food away.
  • Avoid buying take-aways at the last minute instead of cooking the food you already have at home.

Transition Gawler is establishing an energy group

Transition Gawler is establishing an energy group, that will look at clean energy solutions specially for Gawler and regions. Transition Gawler is interested in investigating the right mix of energy sources for Gawler. It might be energy efficiency help, community owned solar power schemes, wind turbines or maybe even a big project for baseload power such as concentrated solar thermal who knows! If you are interested in getting involved, contact Transition Gawler.

Right now Transition Gawler is already working with CORENA (Citizen’s Own Renewable Energy Network Australia) to fund solar and energy efficiency projects in Gawler the first of which is at Gawler Community House.

CORENA provides a practical and immediate way for ‘the people’ to collectively fund new renewable energy installations. CORENA finds worthy projects and organisations then ‘crowd source’ the funding. Transition Gawler looks forward to working with CORENA to bring more great projects to Gawler.

A rapid transition away from polluting fossil fuels such as coal, oil and gas must occur in the next decade to avoid catastrophic climate change.

We will be meeting soon to plan an Energy info night to occur the week of ‘Earth Hour’. So if you are interested please contact us.

Clean renewable energy is the best way forward to meet the energy use of our community.

What you can do:

Join Transition Gawler Energy Group by contacting us- https://transitiongawler.org/contact-us/
Donate to CORENA’s great energy project – http://corenafund.org.au/
Visit the Natural Resources Centre and hire the Home Energy Audit Kit http://www.communitywebs.org/nrcgawler/resource.php
Get professional advice on your energy options – http://dteconsulting.com.au/

Films for Action – a great source of information

This website has plethora of films for you to access on many topics from Climate Change, to Community, permaculture and economy.

I started to add a few of the interesting films under ‘links’ however I thought why not just put the whole web page up.

So here it is. Thanks Mark!

http://www.filmsforaction.org/watch/science_vs_denial_the_truth_about_climate_education/

Happy watching

Regards

Leigh

A Transition Christmas Pledge

If you have been into any shopping center recently you would have sensed that Christmas is just around the corner.

With that it is expected that you will spend an astronomical amount of money on an extraordinary amount of things you don’t need. And all that “Stuff” will come packaged in a multitude of plastics and boxes, which will fill your recycling bins to the brim for the next few collections (if it is recyclable).

This Christmas will you embrace the consumerist attitude we are all lead to believe we must have, or will you buy meaningful and useful gifts, from local businesses (or make your own) and celebrate being with family and loved ones and focus on the things that money can’t buy?

Craft + craft cider + craft beer = ‘Crafternoon’ at the PA

Transition Gawler is having its first ‘Crafternoon’ in Gawler on Sunday 24th November 2.00-4.00pm.

The idea is to share skills and learn craft ideas with an emphasis on reuse/recycle/repurpose.

We anticipate the ‘Crafternoons’ will be held on the last Sunday of the month (excluding December)

Join us at the Prince Albert, Murray St Gawler (near the pedestrian crossing)

Plastics Recycling – The Hard Stuff

Waste reduction is an important theme for Transition Gawler. Thanks to Paul Koch and Gawler NRC the Soft Plastics Trial will continue and hopefully grow. But thats not where our efforts need to end. Paul has provided the following idea for a great project that we would like help to get up and running in Gawler. So anyone interested please contact us as we need all the help we can get.

“It is possible in Gawler to recycle much of the plastics in the household.

The most important issue around recycling is separating the different plastics into specific types. Once separated, it moves off to different companies that granulate the plastics and manufacture new products.

If it is a rigid plastic and has a recycling triangle on it, it can go into the yellow topped recycling bin. Some rigid plastics, that don’t have the recycling triangle can also go into the recycling bin.

Soft plastics such as plastic bags, films etc can be recycled via the current trial that uses yellow bags that go into the recycling bin each fortnight.

Other plastics though, that we find around the house, such as old irrigation line, plastic chairs, old plastic toys etc can be recycled , but not necessarily through the yellow bin. (Please note, the white PVC material used for underground drainage cannot be recycled)

The material in the yellow topped  bins goes down to NAWMA where it travels  through a process of mechanical, then hand sorting. The sorting process is designed to pull out specific materials to go into a particular stream for recycling. Plastic items that we tend to use outside aren’t  easily sorted,  so if they go into the recycling bin,  may be missed, going on to general waste and land fill.

One way of effectively recycling this material is delivering it directly to NAWMA. The material then goes in to a ‘mixed plastic’ stream which is taken off to produce things like garden furniture, garden stakes etc. In fact the material is a very valuable resource for these products, so it shouldn’t go to land fill.

We could start a  recycling program for these  ‘mixed plastics’  by setting up a drop off point for Transition Gawler members. It would be best to use a tandem caged trailer. This will give us the volume to make it worth a trip. Once the trailer is full it could be taken down to NAWMA and unloaded. There is no charge for clean plastic of this type. Maybe this could become the focus of our fund raising in the new year unless someone donates one in the meantime?

Like other forms of recycling it’s important not to mix up other materials. In this case you would be after only the plastics. For example if it is an old plastic toy, just the plastics, not any metal bits. These can be recycled separately.

 Once the process is successfully running, it could be made available to the wider community. For example collection could be linked into food swap events. This way you would have a public location for drop offs.

The other form of hard plastic we can recycle are the smaller pieces such as the  lids off containers,  and milk bottles  and other small hard plastics you find around the house, for example old tooth brushes, credit cards, margarine container  lids etc etc. If we put them straight into the recycling bin they are too small to be picked out of the sorting process, and they tend to be lost to land fill. A solution for these plastics is to collect them into a clear plastic bottle, like a cordial bottle and when it’s full, screw on a lid and then pop in into the recycling bin. When it gets to NAWMA it can be identified by the sorters, as it is a clear bottle and taken out to go into the mixed plastic stream.

Recycling is a great way of reducing the materials going to landfill. With a little bit of effort it is possible to recycle almost all the plastics you find in and around the house.

A program like this would be a good, community, grass-roots  initiative to tackle a problem , plus value the material that would normally go to landfill.”

Thanks Paul for this great idea. Lets make it happen.

Transitions Film Festival

The Transitions Film Festival is Australia’s largest solutions-focused sustainability film festival. The festival showcases powerful, inspiring and ground-breaking films from around the world. Covering topics such as renewable energy, organics & permaculture, economics, design and consciousness, the festival hopes to share and inspire the change needed to create true social and environmental sustainability.

After an enormously successful and well-received program in Melbourne (February 2013) and Darwin (June 2013) the Transitions Film Festival heads to Alice Springs in October and Adelaide and Tasmania in November.

Festival Dates

Alice Springs – 24th and 25th October 2013- Alice Springs Cinema and Olive Pink Botanical Gardens Adelaide – 1st -10th November  2013- Mercury Cinema Tasmania – 5th – 7th November – Hobart, Launceston, Penguin Melbourne – February 2014 – Cinema Nova

Soft Plastics Recycling trial a success!!

We have recieved the following news about the recent Soft Plastics Recycling Trial which has been happening in Gawler.

NRC logo

Soft Plastics recycling- Gawler

A very important trial is currently happening in Gawler; kerb-side soft plastics recycling. Although only relatively small in scale, it is one of the first such programs in Australia.

Soft or flexible plastics make up one of the largest proportions of the general household waste stream that is not being currently recycled. There are many reasons why it has not been recycled previously, including difficulties in handling and processing and convenience for people.

In mid July this year, NAWMA and Visy, in conjunction with the Gawler Regional Natural Resource Centre (NRC), ran a small trial of the practicalities of collecting soft plastics through the kerb-side recycling bins. This trial was only for households in Gawler with a collection on a Friday.

The trial involved placing soft or flexible plastics into a supplied yellow bag, securing it off with the supplied tie and placing it in the normal household recycling bin (yellow lid).

The trial looked at the type of bag that would be strong enough to use, how the sorting process would occur back at NAWMA and the quality of the plastic collected. On all accounts the trial was successful.

A good outcome from that initial trial in July was the extension of the trial for a longer period. The extended trial is still only for Gawler households with the Friday morning pickup.

One of the aims of extending the trial is to gain more information and experience about this form of kerb-side recycling that can feed into a potentially larger, separate trial in the near future.

So, firstly what are soft or flexible plastics? Any plastic, that when scrunched up by hand, does not reform back into a shape, is called a soft plastic.

These include:

  • Shopping bags (thin plastic)
  • Vegetable bags used in supermarkets etc
  • Bread bags
  • Biscuit packets
  • Lolly packets
  • Pasta and rice bags
  • Frozen food bags
  • Cling wrap

At the moment we are not collecting the metal backed plastics, although we may in the futureFrom this ongoing trial we have also leant a few important lessons.

The first is to squeeze as much air as possible out of the bag before tying it off securely. When the bags go into the truck, the load is ‘half’ compacted. This puts pressure on the bags. When they reach NAWMA they go through a big rolling drum that allows different materials to drop out along the way. In this process the bags are tumbled around with all the other material, so if there is a lot of air left in the bag, the chance of it splitting increases as it is goes through the different stages.

The other issue to think about is that the plastics need to be clean, that is free of food wastes. So, for example no bread crumbs in packets etc. There have been concerns raised about packaging with meat juice still in it. Some people rinse off all the juices, let the plastic dry and then place it in the yellow bag, but if you prefer not to do this, it is best not to put this material in your yellow bag, as it could create a health hazard for you.

Another issue is dirt in with the plastic. We should keep the plastic free of dirt etc, but in most cases the plastics we are collecting are from inside the house, so this may not be a big issue, but be very cautious about including soft plastics that have been out in the weather for a while and may be contaminated with dirt etc.

At the moment there are around 50 families collecting for the ongoing trial. NAMWA is happy for more households to join in. So if you are a Gawler resident and would like to recycle your soft plastics, please let Emily at the NRC, or myself know so we can get things organised.

Also, if you need more bags, just contact Emily or myself know and we will make sure you get them.

To recap, for the normal fortnightly recycling days in Gawler, put your yellow bag with your clean soft plastics (flattened out and securely tied) into your recycling (yellow lid) bin.

Hopefully over time we will see large amounts of this plastic being diverted from land fill. Great stuff.

Cheers

Paul Koch

17th October 2013.

0431 866 586

written@tpg.com.au

This is great news and we would like to encourage more people to get involved.

Contact Paul Koch on the details above or Emily at the NRC if you need more yellow bags or if you would like to be involved

ph: (08) 8523 7715

email: emily.griffiths@sa.gov.au

web: www.communitywebs.org/nrcgawler

Zero carbon house doors open for one last weekend

 The TS4 Living award winning zero carbon challenge home is open to the public for the last time this weekend – Saturday 5 and Sunday 6 October 2013.

TS4 Living won the State Government’s Zero Carbon Challenge in 2012 to design and build a three bedroom zero carbon house at
Lochiel Park Green Village, in Campbelltown.

This award winning zero carbon house sets a new standard for contemporary sustainable design and construction. Completed in less than 16 weeks the house is zero net energy, carbon neutral in 32 years, uses 70 per cent less potable water than a conventional home, and connects the owners with the environment via daylight and native landscaping.

Brett Aylen and Paul Hendy of TS4 Architecture will be at Lochiel Park to showcase the home and answer any questions. For more information please visit http://www.ts4living.com.au

Opening times:

Saturday 5 October from 11am until 3pm

Sunday 6 October from 11am until 3pm

Address:

12 Mundy Mews,
Lochiel Park, Campbelltown, SA 5074

Contact:

Brett Aylen, mobile 0423 151 093

Get on your Bike, Gawler

Transition Gawler has teamed up with Gawler NRC to promote cycling as a sustainable means of transport in Gawler. Firstly we will create the “Get on your Bike Gawler” steering group that will work with the community to develop a tailored action plan to make bikes an integral element of Gawler culture. The plan developed by the GOYBG steering group will be a long term tool to ensure the increased consideration of bike use as a means of transport, and the adoption of bike friendly practices across the whole community. Secondly we are creating the “Gawler Bike Hospital” which will be available to the entire community as a resource to bring people together to share bike maintenance skills, provide equipment and support, recycling of bikes and bike parts, and provide low cost bikes for those in need. We have a bunch of great ideas for “Get on your Bike, Gawler” and now we’re looking for more Gawler bike lovers to join us to make this happen. If you’re interested Contact Us.