Published Mar 02 2023

Households find low-waste living challenging. Here’s what needs to change

Australian households produce about 12 million tonnes of waste every year. That puts the sector almost on par with manufacturing or construction.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. With support, households can change patterns of consumption and develop a low-waste lifestyle. Our new research explores how Australians engage with low-waste living.

We interviewed residents about their existing waste management practices. We then invited them to each design and implement their own six-week household experiment. Their ideas ranged from home gardening and repairs to zero-plastic cooking and bulk store shopping. And then we brought them all together with policymakers to share their experiences.

The results show that householders were keen to experiment with change, but that low-waste living is not easy.

Taking responsibility for recycling

For years, Australia sent waste materials offshore for recycling. When China banned these imports in 2018, Australian governments had to fast-track better waste management policies.


Read more Waste not, want not: Moving towards the circular economy


In a true circular economy, nothing is wasted. Resources are valued and continuously reused as they cycle through the system.

But in the transition phase, the focus has been on recycling as a way to reduce the amount of waste sent to landfill.

Soft plastics have been particularly problematic. In recent years, households have been encouraged to take soft plastics, mostly packaging, back to the supermarket. But the REDcycle soft plastics collection scheme was overloaded. Coles and Woolworths paused collection on 9 November 2022 after it was revealed that the scheme had been unable to deliver on its recycling promises for months.

That followed the collapse of recycling company SKM in Victoria in 2019. Stockpiles of unprocessed rubbish filled warehouses, while other recycling was sent directly to landfill.

Several Australian states banned single-use plastics, most recently Victoria, but success will depend on making it easy to use alternatives.

Households produced the bulk of Australia’s plastic waste (47%) and food/organic waste (42%) in 2018-19. Improving these statistics requires changes in social norms regarding lifestyles and consumption practices in conjunction with changes in retail practices, supported by regulation and new collection infrastructure.

Previous research has shown that households operate on the level in between the micro-level of individuals and the macro-level of communities. But there is a lack of appreciation of the role households can play in the transition to sustainability.

Experimenting with change

Transitioning to low-waste living requires changes in household consumption and waste management practices.

The COVID lockdowns in Victoria provided both an opportunity and an incentive for many people to change their consumption practices. However, as life returns to the “new normal”, many find it far from easy to maintain a low-waste life.

We conducted a series of innovative household experiments with 19 Melbourne-based participants.

Workshop participants offered many suggestions in response to the question: How could government policy make low-waste living more convenient? Photo: Author provided

A mother of two students wanted to be 100% waste-free for six weeks, while another mother focused on zero-plastic cooking. Others committed to trying out bulk stores, while a woman living by herself started a garden. Another single woman wanted to learn how to repair her clothes and her bike, while a part-time sales worker living with his husband wanted to create a three-week low-waste action challenge for his friends.

What we learned

Participants said they found household change very challenging.

We were told the experiments required extra mental capacity, time, money and motivation. Householders also needed more information and support to achieve, then maintain, the desired change in practices.

For some, the experience provided an incentive to try something different, such as walking the extra distance to the bulk food store rather than taking the easy option of the supermarket.

Bulk food stores encourage customers to bring their own reusable containers from home, or use more environmentally-friendly packaging such as paper bags, eliminating soft plastic packaging. Photo: Jack Frog, shutterstock.com

Changes didn’t always stick. A transition to shampoo and conditioner bars required extensive research and was too hard for one: “Just that one switch was so intense … it was expensive as well.”

Supermarkets were a major source of frustration around unwanted plastics: “The packaging is such a big problem. It’s just ridiculous. It should be stopped … There are very few items that you can buy that doesn’t have some sort of packaging.”

Social relationships were important in low-waste living. One woman said her family told her they were not prepared to go any further on the zero-waste journey, while another had her husband and kids supporting her all the way.

The challenge of reducing food waste with children in the house came up, too: “It’s challenging to reduce how much food gets wasted with children. I have reduced how much I cook … I’ve tried to do stocktakes of my freezer, my pantry, the fridge … to really focus on meal planning … But it’s really, really challenging … I think if it was just me, I would have a lot more success.”

Facebook groups were a useful resource “because it does make you realise that there are other people who are trying to save every piece of plastic from going in the bin”.

Policies to enable low-waste living

Householders articulated many policy and system changes required to make low-waste living easier, including legislation on high-waste producers, banning polluting products, improving recycling infrastructure, creating markets for recycled products, encouraging innovation, providing better information, and improving product labelling.

The householders were aware of low-waste alternatives in different parts of the world, and frustrated by system failure in Australia.

“We need support and systemic change from the government (policy) and businesses (innovation) to drive down the amount of plastics associated with our everyday products,” one participant said.

Low-waste living should be made easy

Ultimately, our research shows substantial changes are needed to make low-waste living easy.

We found experimentation within the home could be useful in designing and testing new policy. The experience can connect policymakers to real people and the things that matter to them, such as parenting, friendships, sharing a meal, “making ends meet”, and caring for others.

If the transition to a circular economy is to be successful, it needs to be planned from the perspective of everyday life within households.

Acknowledgements: We are deeply grateful for all participants in the study for generously sharing their time, insights and efforts with us.


Read more: Stop tossing your spent vapes and e-cigs: you're breeding a new waste pandemic


This article originally appeared on The Conversation and was co-authored with David O. Reynolds from the National University of Singapore..

About the Authors

  • Jo lindsay

    Professor, Sociology, Associate Dean Enterprise, Arts Faculty

    Jo specialises in the sociology of families, consumption and the environment. Over-consumption in families and communities is a central theme of her research. She researches food and healthy eating in families and the management of alcohol consumption by young people and domestic water use as part of the CRC for Water Sensitive Cities.

  • Ruth lane

    Senior Lecturer, Human Geography in the School of Social Sciences

    Senior Lecturer, Human Geography in the School of Social Sciences

  • Rob raven

    Professor and Deputy Director – Research, Monash Sustainable Development Institute (MSDI)

    Rob is an interdisciplinary scholar, professor of sustainability transitions and deputy director (research) at the Monash Sustainable Development Institute. He is also visiting professor at the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development at Utrecht University. His interest is in understanding the dynamics and governance of sustainability transitions and socio-technical innovation. Rob has made major contributions to multi-level theories of transformative change, socio-technical experimentation and strategic niche management. His empirical work has covered urban, energy and mobility transition processes in Europe, Asia and Australia.

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