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  • 2 days ago
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00:02So, like I was saying, I'm planning to make this a fairly good formal presentation and please shout out your
00:08questions, I'll try and answer them and those that I can't answer, I'll get Peter to clarify later, but, yeah.
00:15This is our Murph and this is where it all comes in. So, yellow bin material coming from the streets
00:22of Shoalhaven, I'm thinking 12,000 tonnes from Shoalhaven and hopefully more from elsewhere.
00:28They'll be coming into the roller doors that you saw on your way in, dropped off in there, and they'll
00:35come along with a conveyor belt that will be running seven hours a day, we hope, and it'll take the
00:43material up to here and then the material snakes its way up and down these conveyor belts, getting sorted through
00:52various different processes, some of which we'll see a little bit more further on,
00:55until we've got pure bales of cardboard, pure bales of plastic number one, which is PET, clear stuff, plastic number
01:06two, milk bottles, metal cans and aluminium cans and any other product
01:13that we desire or that we are incentivised to separate. We've got probably one of the most advanced material recovery
01:23facilities in South Australia, probably the world, because it's one of the newest,
01:28and it is capable of separating Coke cans into Coke cans, Sprite cans into Sprite cans. If there was any
01:36reason to do that, we could do it. So, at the moment we would be sticking them together, but yes.
01:42It all comes in mixed and we'll go on a bit further and I'll try and point out where it's
01:49going.
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