Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
Sponsored Content
HomeIn BusinessJOIN THE CYCLE: THE JOURNEY OF YOUR 10-CENT CONTAINERS

JOIN THE CYCLE: THE JOURNEY OF YOUR 10-CENT CONTAINERS

Have you ever wondered what happens to your drink cans, bottles and cartons after you return them for a 10-cent refund through Victoria’s Container Deposit Scheme (CDS Vic)?

With National Recycling Week (10–16 November) just around the corner, CDS Vic shares what happens next, and how every returned container helps power Victoria’s circular economy.

This year’s theme, Join the Cycle, perfectly aligns with the mission of CDS Vic: keeping eligible drink containers in the recycling loop so they can be remade into new products again and again.

“National Recycling Week is a timely reminder of our shared commitment to a more sustainable Victoria,” said Marianne Doyle, Interim CEO of VicReturn, the coordinator of CDS Vic.

“Recycling eligible drink containers means fewer virgin materials are needed to make new bottles and cans, reducing our impact on the environment,” she said.

The recycling process begins when Victorians return their drink containers at one of the hundreds of refund points across the state. From there, they’re sorted by material type and sent to recycling facilities to be processed back into new products.

Here’s where your containers go next:

Plastic bottles are sorted by material type (PET, HDPE and others) and recycled at facilities in Victoria. They’re cleaned, shredded into flakes, melted down, extruded and turned into pellets, then used to make new products.

Glass bottles are cleaned and sorted by colour into glass cullet, at facilities in Victoria and South Australia. The cullet is then sent to glass manufacturing plants in Victoria and South Australia that use it in the production of new glass bottles and jars.

“Glass can be infinitely recycled, so returning your glass bottles through CDS Vic helps conserve our natural resources,” Mrs Doyle said.

Aluminium cans are bailed before being shipped overseas to be reprocessed into aluminium coils. These are returned to Australia where they are used to make new drink cans.

Since launching in November 2023, CDS Vic has helped Victorians recycle more, reduce litter and keep valuable materials out of landfill. Victorians have returned 2.3 billion drink containers, earning $230 million in refunds.

CDS Vic proudly supports Planet Ark’s National Recycling Week, which has encouraged Australians since 1996 to reduce, reuse and repurpose their waste.

Join the cycle this National Recycling Week by collecting and returning eligible drink containers for a 10-cent refund at your nearest refund point. Visit cdsvic.org.au to learn more.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Yakkerboo set for stage debut

Yakkerboo is a common sight around town, whether it be the statue on Main Street or his annual appearance at the festival, but there...
More News

No slowing down for real estate growth in Pakenham

Pakenham’s property growth continues to rise with the median house price at $700k. According to data from property.com.au, $700k was the median price based on...

Wangoom sisters help to fill vet shortages

Wangoom sisters Abbey and Ella Titmus are helping to fill a growing void across regional Australia for large animal and mixed practice vets. Australia is...

Battle breeding innovation conference

A conference in Geelong next month will show Australian cattle breeders how new technologies and innovations can shape the future of their herds and...

Scope is Supporting You to Live the Life You Choose

For over 75 years, Scope has been a trusted supporter of people with disability, empowering them to grow in confidence and live the life...

Empowering Young Minds at Aspire – Enrol for 2026!

More than just childcare, Aspire is a community built on connection. Our educators take the time to truly know each child, creating classrooms filled...

Support becomes entitlement

There is a moment many community organisations reach, often without realising it, a point when support quietly shifts into expectation, and gratitude is replaced...

Champs, chats and chokes

DAVE: Good morning boys, what a massive week of sport; we’ve a had a Pro-Am series through West Gippsland, the Woolamai Cup was on,...

Wells to lead next-gen Crows

Jason Wells may bleed red, but he also bleeds gold and navy blue. The legendary Longwarry forward is known for kicking over 1000 goals on...

Pakenham History: Yakkerboo stands the test of time

It fills Ray Canobie with pride that an event he devised as deputy shire secretary in the mid-1970s as a means to engender civic...

Fourth attack in weeks rocks Heritage Church

Still reeling from earlier vandalism and attempted break-ins, Lang Lang’s St John’s Anglican Church has been hit for a fourth time, despite increased patrols. The...