Skip to content
Environment

PORT MACQUARIE ONE OF THE BEST FOR SECOND HAND SHOPPING

NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) 2 mins read

Port Macquarie locals are leading the circular charge after re-homing more than 22,700 items and saving $282,000 by opting for pre-loved rather than new during Australia’s biggest annual second-hand shopping event, Garage Sale Trail.

Results from the 2024 Garage Sale Trail show Port Macquarie residents, closely following Central Coast, sold and purchased the second most items, reusing a staggering 13 tonnes.

NSW also came out as the best performing State, reusing 178 tonnes of items.

NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) Executive Director of Programs and Innovation, Alexandra Geddes congratulates the people of NSW, particularly those in the Port Macquarie, for embracing a circular attitude.

“This data shows how the seemingly small act of choosing second-hand delivers powerful economic, environmental and social benefits,” Ms Geddes said.

“13 tonnes of items have been saved from ending up in landfill thanks to the Port Macquarie community embracing reuse and shopping at garage sales.

“The average Port Macquarie garage sale organiser took home $519. With cost-of-living pressures, we know second-hand shopping is a popular, affordable and savvy way to turn things you no longer need into extra cash. 

“Even more encouraging is the shifting attitudes across the community, with 88 per cent of participants more likely to resell items at future garage sales or online marketplaces and 90 per cent of sellers saying they avoided sending items to landfill.

“NSW is on the cusp of a waste crisis. Greater Sydney’s landfill space is predicted to run out by 2030 and initiatives, like Garage Sale Trail, highlight how we can all take steps and work together to transition to a circular economy.”

The report follows the National Guidelines for Measuring Reuse created by Monash University and draws on research recently completed by Charitable Reuse Australia and the NSW Environment Protection Authority.

To learn more about Garage Sale Trail and view the 2024 Impacts Report visit: www.garagesaletrail.com.au

Garage Sale Trail is funded by the NSW EPA as a Waste and Sustainable Materials Strategy initiative.

The support of Port Macquarie Hastings Council has been critical to the success of the event, with Council funding, coordinating and promoting the event to the community.

Council is already looking forward to supporting Garage Sale Trail this year and residents are urged to start collecting any unwanted items.


Contact details:

[email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Environment
  • 17/07/2025
  • 10:50
NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA)

$30,000 FINE ISSUED FOR UNSAFE STORAGE OF LEAD WASTE

Images can be found here: http://bit.ly/4nJt7Xk A used battery processing company has been fined $30,000 by the NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) for storing toxic lead waste outside approved areas at its Mount Druitt facility. EPA officers carried out unannounced inspections in November and December 2024 after receiving a complaint about the transport of dangerous goods. They found Spilth to Wealth Pty Ltd, trading as S2W Recyclers, had stored approximately 140 tonnes of concentrated waste – more than double the 55-tonne limit allowed under its environment protection licence. A large proportion of this waste was also kept outside required bunded…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 17/07/2025
  • 10:05
Australian Conservation Foundation

Voices for nature needed on productivity roundtable

The Australian Conservation Foundation has called for voices representing the environment to be included in the Albanese government’s upcoming productivity roundtable. “Repairing Australia’s broken nature protection law is one critical thing the Albanese government can do to boost productivity,” said ACF’s nature program manager Basha Stasak. “As former Treasury secretary Ken Henry powerfully outlined at the National Press Club, the biggest threat to Australia’s future productivity comes from nature destruction. “Research by ACF shows roughly half Australia’s GDP (49% or $896 billion) has a moderate to very high direct dependence on nature.” (Of course, indirectly every dollar that flows through…

  • Environment
  • 17/07/2025
  • 07:31
WWF-Australia

End of logging aids 34 threatened species in Victoria

New study is the first to quantify the benefits; lessons for NSW Stills here: https://dams.wwf.org.au/resourcespace/?c=6117&k=f6d1210e86 A new research paper finds the end of native…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.