The banking details for Cleanaway Daniels will be changing from August 2025. Click here to learn more.

‘Onboarding’ a new CEO from his home office

‘Onboarding’ a new CEO from his home office

Introducing a new employee to an organisation is a daily event across the world but how do you ‘on-board’ the boss during a lockdown?

Industry Updates - Our People

September 1, 2021

Highlights

"The plan has me getting around all the states and as many locations and teams as practical over the first few months."

Tags: CWY
Highlights

"The plan has me getting around all the states and as many locations and teams as practical over the first few months."

Introducing a new employee to an organisation is a daily event across the world but how do you ‘onboard’ the boss during a lockdown?

It is possible but, as new Cleanaway CEO and Managing Director Mark Schubert is discovering, it requires a flexible and creative approach.

Even before he started in in his new role on 30 August, Mark was getting to know the Cleanaway business virtually.

This is no easy feat given Australia’s leading waste management company has more than 250 sites across the waste value chain from collections through resource recovery to treatment and disposal, in every state plus the Australian Capital Territory and Northern Territory.

Although he will not see all locations in the short term, this site tour is all about helping Mark see and hear how our 6,500-plus people are working with our prized assets and infrastructure and fleet to help create a circular economy as part of our mission to make a sustainable future possible.

“My plan is to spend a lot of time listening, learning and seeing how Cleanaway works,” he says.

He has been dropping into Cleanaway sites around the country from his home office in Sydney, where he is bunkered down because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Mark has crisscrossed the nation so far with an itinerary that has included our:

  • Liquid and Technical Service (LTS) operations in every state
  • Industrial & Waste Services (IWS) team servicing our customer QAL in QLD, our IWS Kwinana site in WA, and the team aqua cutting on the Westgate Tunnel Project, in Victoria
  • Perth Material Recovery Facility (MRF)
  • Inkerman Landfill and Wingfield Resource Recovery Centre (RRC), in SA
  • Victorian Commingled Resource Recovery (VCRR) network, Melbourne Regional Landfill (MRL), Brooklyn RRC, and the Dandenong South East Organics Facility (SEOF)
  • Cleanaway Daniels at Silverwater
  • Erskine Park Transfer Station and Landfill, Hillsdale depot, and Eastern Creek Container Deposit Scheme, in Sydney
  • Hemmant Recycling and RRC, New Chum Landfill in Ipswich, Logan depot, in QLD
  • Hydrocarbons sites in Perth, SA and Melbourne and our three Hydrocarbons refineries.

And that is just to name a few!! 😊

Managers at each location have been taking him on virtual tours, holding their phones up to provide sound and vision while providing commentary and answering questions, as ‘spotters’ ensure the tours are conducted safely.

Mark regrets he has been unable to be there physically and, when covid restrictions lift, is looking forward to getting out and spending time with our teams.

“The plan has me getting around all the states and as many locations and teams as practical over the first few months. As restrictions ease, I will switch back to face to face,” he says.

“Cleanaway has an exciting future and I’m excited to be joining the Cleanaway team.”

Contact us to learn more about an amazing career at Cleanaway

Circular economy for a sustainable future

Circular economy for a sustainable future

COO Brendan Gill and Clean Up Australia Chairman Pip Kiernan talk about Cleanaway's strategy and how our partnership supports a circular economy

Industry Updates - Partnerships

August 25, 2021

Highlights

Society’s resources are finite, which is why at the heart of Cleanaway’s strategy is finding every opportunity to recover resources from the ‘waste’ we collect. This includes kerbside recycling, and the output from commerce and industry such as construction and demolition waste, organics, waste oil and more.

Cleanaway Chief Operating Officer Brendan Gill explains our resource recovery strategy and Clean Up Australia Chairman Pip Kiernan talks about how our partnership further supports the concept of a circular economy that is gaining traction with support from policy-makers and investments from industry.

Contact us to learn more about how we’re making a sustainable future possible for communities and businesses across Australia.

Cross-industry joint venture to build new plastic recycling facility

Cross-industry joint venture to build new plastic recycling facility

Cleanaway, Pact Group, Asahi Beverages and Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (CCEP) have announced a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to form a joint venture that will build and operate a new PET recycling facility.

Industry Updates - Partnerships - Resource Recovery

August 16, 2021

Highlights

“This PET plastic pelletising facility is a huge win for the environment by creating a high value, recycled raw material from plastics we collect and sort through our network. At Cleanaway our mission is to make a #sustainablefuture possible and we see waste as a resource to achieve that.”

Tags: Plastics
Highlights

“This PET plastic pelletising facility is a huge win for the environment by creating a high value, recycled raw material from plastics we collect and sort through our network. At Cleanaway our mission is to make a #sustainablefuture possible and we see waste as a resource to achieve that.”

Pact Group, Cleanaway, Asahi Beverages and Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (CCEP) have announced they have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to form a joint venture that will build and operate a new PET recycling facility. Under the MOU, the parties intend to come together to provide an industry model for recycling solutions in Australia. This will include the new facility as well as the PET recycling facility currently being built by Pact Group, Cleanaway and Asahi Beverages through Circular Plastics Australia (PET) in Albury-Wodonga, which is expected to be completed later this year.

The proposed facility will provide a massive boost to Australian recycling by processing raw plastic material collected via Container Deposit Schemes and kerbside recycling. It is expected to process the equivalent of around 1 billion bottles each year to produce over 20,000 tonnes of new recycled PET bottles and food packaging. The facility will use state-of-the-art sorting, washing, decontamination and extrusion technology.

The cross-industry solution combines the complementary expertise of each participant to enhance their individual sustainability goals. Cleanaway will provide available PET through its collection and sorting network, Pact will provide technical and packaging expertise and CCEP, Asahi Beverages and Pact will buy the recycled PET from the facility to use in their respective products. The plant, when fully operational, will be run by Pact.

A decision on the plant’s location is anticipated in the coming months and construction is expected to be complete by 2023.

CCEP and Asahi Beverages, while competitors in the beverage market, have, for the purpose of this joint venture, joined with Pact and Cleanaway to increase the production and availability of recycled PET resin in Australia. The parties are proud to work with one another to advance the cause of sustainability and recycling. This proposed plant is an important step forward in creating a local plastics circular economy in Australia. This new self-sustaining industry is expected to create dozens of new jobs during the construction phase and operation of the plant.

In describing the deal, Peter West, CCEP Vice President and General Manager Australia, Pacific and Indonesia said, “This new joint venture will deliver a collaborative cross-industry solution to recycle the material that we use to produce our products. Together we can work towards creating a circular economy for PET within the beverages industry, ensuring that we are using more locally processed recycled content for the production of our bottles in Australia.”

Asahi Beverages Group CEO Robert Iervasi said, “This will be a ground-breaking project that will massively boost PET recycling capacity. It will help transform recycling in Australia by providing a new, local source of high-quality recycled PET. The building of this large rPET plant along with the facility in Albury-Wodonga is a major step towards helping us deliver a truly circular economy for our consumers.”

Cleanaway Chief Operating Officer Brendan Gill said, “This project supports Cleanaway’s Footprint 2025 by ensuring we have the right infrastructure in place to create a domestic circular economy. This PET plastic pelletising facility is a huge win for the environment by creating a high value, recycled raw material from plastics we collect and sort through our network. At Cleanaway our mission is to make a sustainable future possible and we see waste as a resource to achieve that.”

Group CEO and Managing Director from Pact Group, Sanjay Dayal said, “We are delighted to be able to bring a scaled cross-industry solution that solves for the local production of recycled resin. We are proud to have CCEP, Asahi Beverages and Cleanaway as partners creating a local circular economy. This partnership shows the value of a solution that works for industry and consumers. This is completely aligned to Pact’s strategy which is to lead the local circular economy through reuse, recycling, and packaging solutions”.

The arrangements set out in this announcement remain subject to the finalisation of legally binding documents between the parties.

New PET recycling facility to be built by industry partnership

New PET recycling facility to be built by industry partnership

Proposed facility will provide a massive boost to Australian recycling by processing 1 billion plastic bottles each year

New $38 million Laverton plastic recycling plant creates new jobs and reinvents recycling in Victoria

New $38 million Laverton plastic recycling plant creates new jobs and reinvents recycling in Victoria

Pact Group and Cleanaway today announced the creation of a new plastic recycling facility at Laverton, Victoria

Cleanaway and Pact announce new plastic recycling facility for Victoria

Cleanaway and Pact announce new plastic recycling facility for Victoria

Circular Plastics Australia announced the creation of a new plastic recycling facility at Laverton, Victoria that will become Australia's largest post-consumer polyethylene recycling plant

Industry Updates - Resource Recovery

Highlights

The opportunities presented by the circular economy are endless. Everything we put into landfill is an opportunity lost, not only for the environment, but also a lost opportunity for the economy. This 20,000-ton plastic reprocessing facility is a huge win for the environment by diverting plastic from landfill and turning it into food-grade packaging. It's also a huge win for the economy by creating economic growth and jobs. At Cleanaway our mission is to make a sustainable future possible and we see waste as a resource to achieve that

Highlights

The opportunities presented by the circular economy are endless. Everything we put into landfill is an opportunity lost, not only for the environment, but also a lost opportunity for the economy. This 20,000-ton plastic reprocessing facility is a huge win for the environment by diverting plastic from landfill and turning it into food-grade packaging. It's also a huge win for the economy by creating economic growth and jobs. At Cleanaway our mission is to make a sustainable future possible and we see waste as a resource to achieve that

New $38 million Laverton plastic recycling plant creates new jobs and reinvents recycling in Victoria

Pact Group and Cleanaway today announced the creation of a new plastic recycling facility at Laverton, Victoria. This facility will become Australia’s largest post-consumer polyethylene recycling plant converting locally collected kerbside materials into high quality food grade rHDPE and rPP resin. This will facilitate the inclusion of locally processed recycled resin into food, dairy and other packaging, enabling brand owners and retailers to deliver on their sustainability objectives.

This state of the art facility will process more than 20,000 tonnes or the equivalent of over 500 million plastic milk bottles and food tubs collected from household recycling bins into food grade resins and will be located at Cleanaway’s recycling facility at Laverton.

This joint venture between Pact and Cleanaway complements the existing PET joint venture between Pact, Cleanaway and Asahi, with construction of the country’s largest PET recycling facility in Albury well underway and ahead of schedule for commissioning later this year.

The new Laverton facility will augment Australia’s local processing capacity for recycled plastics, which are subject to a series of rolling export bans from later this year. Australia has lacked local onshore processing capacity to manage reprocessing of waste collected through kerbside collections, most of which was being sent offshore prior to export bans.

This facility will enable food and beverage manufacturers to include locally processed recycled content in their packaging providing a major benefit to the environment. Many brand owners have committed to reduce their reliance on virgin plastic by 2025.

Construction of the plant will start towards the end of the year and it is expected to be fully operational by December 2022.

The business will trade as Circular Plastics Australia (PE). Cleanaway will provide the recycled plastic through its collection and sorting network, and Pact will provide technical knowledge, operate the plant, and buy recycled plastic resin from the facility to use in their packaging. with the balance sold to third parties.

This project is being supported by the Victorian Government through its Recycling Victoria Infrastructure Fund and the Australian Government through its Recycling Modernisation Fund.

Federal Minister for the Environment, the Hon. Sussan Ley MP, stated: “This investment in the plastics circular economy is a significant vote of confidence in the Morrison Government’s transformation of the recycling industry, which is good for the environment, good for the economy and good for jobs. The project between Cleanaway and Pact, which is supported through our Recycling Modernisation Fund, will be critical in reaching two national waste targets – increasing the resource recovery rate to 80 per cent and seeing 50 per cent recycled content in packaging by 2030”.

Minister for Energy, Environment and Climate Change Lily D’Ambrosio, said: “This new facility will massively increase Victoria’s capacity to recycle plastics. It will mean more plastic material will be given a second life as new food grade packaging such as turning a milk bottle back into a milk bottle”.

Commenting on the arrangement, Pact’s Managing Director and CEO, Mr Sanjay Dayal, said: “This new recycling facility highlights the progress we are making in expanding our reuse and recycling capability, a core component of our growth strategy. At Pact, we are committed to leading the way in creating a strong, local circular economy that diverts waste materials from landfill and uses them to deliver sustainably manufactured products, including recycled packaging solutions that are increasingly in demand. With this in mind, we are delighted to be able to lead the development of this new industry in Australia which will also create thousands of new jobs and support the national manufacturing industry. We are pleased with the progress that we have made with our customers in enabling them to meet the expectations from consumers for brands to prioritise the adoption of sustainable packaging. We look forward to working with many more brand owners and retailers to help them achieve their 2025 APCO targets”.

Cleanaway’s Chief Operating Officer Brendan Gill said: “The opportunities presented by the circular economy are endless. This 20,000-tonne plastic pelletising facility is a huge win for the environment by creating a high value, recycled raw material from plastics we collect and sort through our network. This venture makes it possible to turn a milk bottle back into a milk bottle. This will provide our Melbourne councils and commercial customers with a great outcome for their recycling and contributes to the development of a domestic circular economy. At Cleanaway our mission is to make a sustainable future possible and we see waste as a resource to achieve that”.

Australian Packaging Covenant Organisation CEO, Brooke Donnelly, said: “It’s fantastic to see continued leadership and decisive action from sustainability champions, Pact and Cleanaway as we work towards achieving the 2025 National Packaging Targets. Recently APCO has been working closely with the dairy industry to co-design a Roadmap for sustainable packaging that will support Australia’s transition to a circular economy in the dairy sector. The Dairy Roadmap will be released in the coming months and will provide a collective vision and framework for sustainable dairy packaging, providing direction for the dairy industry and supporting initiatives such as Circular Plastics Australia who are providing the infrastructure and capacity for HDPE and PP plastics to be collected, recycled, and used in other packaging. The UK has seen a successful market conversion of 30% inclusion of rHDPE in milk packaging since the creation of the National Dairy Roadmap in 2008. This new recycling plant will enable Australian dairy manufacturers to include locally processed rHDPE in milk bottles going forward.”

Bulla CEO, Alan Hood commented: “We applaud Pact and Cleanaway for providing much needed local processing infrastructure to provide brands with food grade rHDPE. We know that our consumers care deeply about the environment and as one of Australia’s largest privately owned dairy companies, we are delighted to be able to offer recycled content in our packaging and make another important step towards achieving our 2025 APCO targets”.

Marc Anderson COO at Brownes Dairy said : “Sustainability is at the core of what we do at Brownes and we are excited to have the opportunity to provide our consumers with a more sustainable option through the introduction of recycled content in our HDPE milk bottles. This is an outstanding initiative between Pact and Cleanaway. Brownes is making great progress toward its obligations under the Australian Packaging Covenant, and we can only get there through the research, commitment and investment of these organisations”.

Archer Walters, Managing Director of Grove Juice stated: “We are proud to have committed to include recycled content in our packaging and it is only through these kinds of investments that brand owners are able to make these commitments. It is great to see Pact and Cleanaway showing industry leadership in providing much needed local processing capability and we look forward to a strong future supply partnership”.

Unilever ANZ’s CEO, Nicky Sparshott said: “Pact’s increased capacity to process recycled content locally will play an important role in enabling more of our Unilever products to be made with recycled plastic. We are proud of our bold commitments to reduce virgin plastic across our portfolio by 2025, and it is partnerships like these that help us bring some of Australia’s favourite brands (such as Dove, Omo and TRESemmé) to consumers in a more sustainable way – and at a mainstream scale. We are excited to be part of a coalition of changemakers and innovators committed to driving systemic change when it comes to plastics in Australia”.

Download media release (PDF)

Cleanaway commends NSW Government for 20-year waste strategy

Cleanaway commends NSW Government for 20-year waste strategy

Cleanaway congratulates the NSW Government for releasing its long-anticipated Waste and Sustainable Materials Strategy 2041

Communities - Industry Updates

June 18, 2021

Tags: CWY
Highlights

Cleanaway congratulates the NSW Government for releasing its long-anticipated Waste and Sustainable Materials Strategy 2041 document, commonly known by the industry as the 20-year waste strategy, and the NSW Plastics Action Plan.

In the strategy documents, the NSW Government has committed to an ambitious reform agenda including phasing out problematic single-use plastics, mandating the procurement of recycled content, mandating the separation of food organics and garden organics (FOGO), and providing incentives for biogas generation from waste.

Cleanaway’s Chief Operating Officer Mr Brendan Gill said: “I commend the NSW Government for its commitment to creating a domestic circular economy. These strategies provide industry with certainty moving forward to invest in infrastructure and innovation and, in turn, create new opportunities and jobs.

“Over the next five years, the NSW Government will back these strategies with more than $365 million of funding to maximise recycling. Cleanaway has previously benefited from $5 million from the Environmental Trust as part of the NSW Government’s Waste Less, Recycle More initiative to build a PET pelletising facility in Albury*. It is anticipated the facility, a joint venture with Asahi and Pact Group, will recycle the equivalent of around one billion 600ml PET plastic bottles each year, which will be used as a raw material to produce new bottles and food and beverage packaging in Australia, to close the loop on our recycling.

“The strategy includes a policy framework recognising energy-from-waste as an important part of the waste hierarchy, notably in managing residual waste where waste cannot be avoided and recycling and other forms of recovery are not possible. The benefits of energy-from-waste include reducing landfill volumes and a reduction of our carbon footprint, building towards a more sustainable future.

“Cleanaway has a long-term role to play in NSW, ensuring recyclables reprocessing capacity can continue to grow into the future, which is aligned to Cleanaway’s Footprint 2025 roadmap. We are supporting the NSW Government to realise the objectives and targets outlined in its circular economy policy Waste and Sustainable Materials Strategy 2041 by creating economic growth, jobs and making a sustainable future possible.”

* This initiative is funded through the NSW waste levy, with the support of the Department of Regional NSW and the Australian Government Recycling Modernisation Fund.

For more information, contact:

Cleanaway:
Mark Biddulph
Head of Corporate Affairs
+61 499 332 601
Mark.biddulph@cleanaway.com.au

Download media release (PDF)

CEO Commencement Date

CEO Commencement Date

Industry Updates

June 8, 2021

Tags: CWY
Highlights

On 10 May 2021, Cleanaway Waste Management Limited (ASX:CWY) announced the appointment of Mark Schubert as the Company’s incoming Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director.

Cleanaway is pleased to advise that Mr Schubert will commence in the role on 30 August 2021.

Following Mr Schubert’s commencement, Cleanaway Executive Chairman Mark Chellewwill remain in the role for a transition period until 30 September, before returning to the role of Non-Executive Chairman. Brendan Gill will continue in the role of Chief Operating Officer to support an effective leadership transition.

Mr Chellew said, “We look forward to welcoming Mark on board in August. He is joining at an exciting time for Cleanaway. I would also like to extend my thanks to Brendan Gill and the Cleanaway Executive Team for their support and diligence during the transition period.” This announcement has been authorised by the Board of Directors.

Investor Relations Contact:
Richie Farrell
Head of Investor Relations
+61 2 8985 5602
richie.farrell@cleanaway.com.au

Download PDF

Waste export ban drives onshore recycling

Waste export ban drives onshore recycling

To recover as much material as possible for recycling, Cleanaway has been working closely with the Federal Government to ensure we’re ready for the waste export bans rolling out over the next three years.

Industry Updates

May 27, 2021

Highlights

These investments (more details below) are part of Cleanaway’s Footprint 2025 strategy to ensure we have the right infrastructure and technology across the waste value chain

Highlights

These investments (more details below) are part of Cleanaway’s Footprint 2025 strategy to ensure we have the right infrastructure and technology across the waste value chain

In 2018, the global waste and recycling landscape shifted when China implemented it’s National Sword policy to limit the import of low-grade plastic and contaminated materials from overseas markets. The immediate result was to force Australia to review how we managed our recycling and our reliance on offshore markets for commodity sale and manufacturing.

This shift presented an opportunity for legislators, the waste management industry, businesses, and households to take more accountability for our waste and start to see it as a resource. This move towards a circular economy – an ‘in-house’ ecosystem where the materials we consume are reused and remanufactured onshore – will create sustainable jobs in Australia, reduce our reliance on volatile foreign markets and ensure all waste is seen as a resource.

To encourage the development a circular economy, the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) announced a ban on the export of waste plastic, paper, glass and tyres. This ban is now part of the Recycling and Waste Reduction Act 2020 which regulates how we export those waste types. The waste sector also received a boost through the Federal Government’s $190 million Recycling Modernisation Fund (RMF) announced as part of a national strategy to reach a resource recovery target of 80% by 2030.

Chief Operating Officer, Brendan Gill said, “Cleanaway is well positioned to continue exporting plastic and glass with around $115 million of investments in reprocessing facilities that ensure that material is optimised for recycling into new products.

“These investments (more details below) are part of Cleanaway’s Footprint 2025 strategy to ensure we have the right infrastructure and technology across the waste value chain and can play our role in sustainably meeting Australia’s waste needs and contributing to the creation of a circular economy.”

1 January 2021
Export ban on: Unprocessed glass in a whole or broken state. Both formed packaging and flat sheet glass.

Cleanaway has a licence to export cullet, which is a ‘furnace-ready’ form of processed Container Deposit Scheme (CDS) glass that can be used by recyclers. Further glass beneficiation technology is coming in 2022 with new technology installations in Melbourne to wash and colour sort, processing 140,000 tonnes per annum of kerbside and CDS glass.

1 July 2021
Export ban on: Mixed plastics that are not of a single resin or polymer type or where further sorting, cleaning and/or processing is required before re-use.

Mixed polymers
Cleanaway’s sorting technology means that mixed plastic is only 5% of our material. This material can be further sorted at our Laverton Plastic Recovery Facility or sold to other domestic processors.

Mixed residual plastics
Cleanaway is working with mechanical and chemical recycling partners to establish recycling solutions and processing for this waste stream.

1 July 2022
Export ban on: Single resin or polymer plastics that have not been reprocessed. For example, cleaned and baled PET bottles.

Circular Plastics Australia (PET)
The Albury plastic recycling facility is on track to begin operations in December 2021. The facility will recycle the equivalent of 1 billion 600ml PET plastic bottles each year to be used as a raw material to produce food and beverage packaging.

Circular Plastics Australia (PE)
The plastic recycling plant in Melbourne will convert 20,000 tons of kerbside HDPE and PP plastic waste into 18,000 tons of food-grade and non-food grade pellets. The plant will be located on a currently vacant section of Cleanaway’s Laverton North MRF site.

The plant is expected to be commissioned by December 2022.

Circular Plastics Australia (WA)
The proposed plastic recycling plant in WA will see more than 17,000 tons of kerbside PET, HDPE and PP plastic waste processed into nearly 14,000 tons of resin and polymer flake. This plant will also process post-industrial recycled plastic.

LDPE
Cleanaway is currently working with the government to establish viable processing and circular solutions for LDPE and our customers.

Laverton North Plastic Recovery Facility
Currently sorting kerbside plastic into five different streams, further improvements are planned to process up to 20,000 tonnes per annum of HDPE and PP into food grade and non-food-grade recycled resins for plastic re-processing.

1 July 2024
Export ban on: Mixed and unsorted paper and cardboard.
Although clean cardboard remains a strong recyclable commodity, more needs to be done with lower grade mix papers from Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs). Innovative technology to process mixed paper and cardboard is being investigated to ensure we’re ready for the ban.

Contact us to learn more about how we’re making a sustainable future possible for communities and businesses across Australia.

Introducing new safety technology to Cleanaway’s national fleet

Introducing new safety technology to Cleanaway’s national fleet

A new collision avoidance system has been installed in most of Cleanaway’s heavy vehicles to improve road safety for all users.

Industry Updates

May 24, 2021

Highlights

We have now rolled out Mobileye to the great majority of the Cleanaway fleet nationally and are looking forward to further improving road safety and seeing positive results across our fleet

Highlights

We have now rolled out Mobileye to the great majority of the Cleanaway fleet nationally and are looking forward to further improving road safety and seeing positive results across our fleet

A new collision avoidance system has been installed in most of Cleanaway’s heavy vehicles to improve road safety for all users.

The Mobileye Advanced Driver Assist system has been fitted to more than 3,000 vehicles across the fleet, including waste trucks, tankers, prime movers and light vehicles such as utilities.

Cleanaway’s Head of Health & Safety & Regulatory Compliance, Rachel Irvine-Marshall, said the $5 million-plus national roll-out followed the successful trial of the system in the Victorian Solid Waste Services fleet during the first half of 2019.

“With our teams operating heavy vehicles in many different environments, driver distraction is a critical health and safety risk,” Rachel said.

“Studies show that about 90 percent of accidents are caused by driver error and almost 80 percent of crashes involve driver inattention within three seconds before an event.

“The results of our trial were compelling with a significant decrease in driver at fault incidents and a reduction in incident severity within the Victorian fleet.

“We have now rolled out Mobileye to the great majority of the Cleanaway fleet nationally and are looking forward to further improving road safety and seeing positive results across our fleet.”

The Mobileye system consists of a forward-facing vision sensor placed on the inside of the windscreen along with a visual display unit on the dashboard which faces the driver.

The system helps drivers by constantly monitoring the road in front of them.

The only vehicles excluded from the fit-out program were new vehicles with similar safety features, older and other vehicles which were not suitable for the program, and unregistered vehicles that did not leave work sites.

Cleanaway’s Head of Fleet & Logistics, George Gerdan, said the introduction of Mobileye would ensure Cleanaway’s drivers had access to the best technology to improve road safety.

“Given the size of our fleet and the fact our heavy vehicles operate every day on Australian roads, the safety of our employees and the communities in which they operate is our highest priority,” George said.

The features of the system include:

  • Forward collision warning of an imminent collision with a vehicle up to 2.7 seconds before
  • Headway monitoring and warning if the driver gets too close to the vehicle in front
  • Speed limit indicator and traffic sign recognition to notify of new speed limits or if the limit is exceeded
  • Lane departure warning of an unintentional deviation from the driving lane
  • Pedestrian and cyclist collision warning

Contact us to learn more about how we’re making a sustainable future possible.