Fri. Nov 8th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

An Albury business has been fined almost $600,000 for illegally stockpiling 28,000 waste tyres.

Carbon MF Pty Ltd and its sole director Mark Fair were fined $582,375 by the Land and Environment Court last week for land pollution and failing to comply with an Environment Protection Authority (EPA) clean-up notice to remove the tyres stored near Albury Airport.

Court documents revealed that from February 1, 2021, to January 21, 2022, Carbon MF was paid $303,639.35 to receive about 22,000 4WD tyres, 45,000 car tyres, and 12,000 truck tyres.

EPA executive director of operations Jason Gordon said after the court ruling that stockpiled tyres were a potential fire hazard and strict conditions applied to their storage to keep the community safe.

Large rows of stacked tyres.
Carbon MF was paid to shred and on-sell waste tyres.(Supplied: Environment Protection Authority)

“If these tyres had caught alight it could have resulted in a serious incident with toxic smoke potentially impacting nearby residents and impeding air traffic at the nearby airport,” Mr Gordon said.

“Carbon MF not only failed to comply with the EPA’s clean-up notice but also received a delivery of a further 5,000 tyres after the notice was served.

“The company must take its responsibility to the community and the environment seriously.”

A pile of used tyres in a warehouse

Once alight, rubber tyres are extremely difficult to extinguish.(Supplied: EPA NSW)

Stockpiling more than 500 tyres can be a land pollution offence under the Protection of the Environment Operations Act 1997.

Mr Fair pleaded guilty to four offences involving land pollution and breaches of the EPA clean-up notice. 

The EPA is working to have the tyres removed from the site.

Carbon MF Pty Ltd has gone into liquidation and could not be contacted by the ABC. 

Tyre pile getting bigger

According to data from Tyre Stewardship Australia, tyre recovery has gone backwards in the past year, dropping below 80 per cent.

A woman stands infront of trucks

Lina Goodman for Tyre Stewardship Australia is seeing an increase of tyre dumping.(Supplied: Tyre Stewardships Australia)

Chief executive Lina Goodman said there were still 11.3 million used tyres stockpiled or dumped around Australia.

“Particularly in the last two years the recovery of passenger and bus tyres, which used to be up around 90 per cent, has dropped to 80 per cent,” she said.

“More end of life tyres are going to landfill, stock piles, or illegally dumped locations.

“Tyres are becoming problematic for the community. Stockpiles are fire hazards. Just look at the fire than happened in South Australia in February this year.”

a warehouse full of thousands of tyres

The EPA is working with the owner of the site to have the tyres removed as quickly and efficiently as possible.(Supplied: Environment Protection Authority)

Ms Goodman said there was an increase in “rogue operators” collecting tyres to export and dumping them in creek beds, landfill, or illegal stockpiles if they could find no overseas buyer.

“Of the tyres we are collecting in Australia a lot of that volume is exported, largely to South-East Asia, and used as a fuel replacement,” she said.

Old car tyres abandoned by road

More tyres are being illegally dumped by roads. (Supplied: Tyre Stewardships Australia)

Source link