Skip to content
Environment

FORMER TRUEGAIN SITE OWNER TO PAY $400K OVER FAILURE TO CLEAN UP CONTAMINATION

NSW EPA 2 mins read

The owner and director of a former waste oil refinery at Rutherford has been convicted of three offences and ordered to pay over $400,000 for failing to comply with a clean-up notice issued by the EPA and a prohibition notice issued by the then Minister for Energy and Environment.

The NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) successfully prosecuted Mr Robert Pullinger in the Land and Environment Court for failing to clean up contaminated wastewater and remove hazardous substances from the former Truegain site, which posed serious risks to the environment.

The prohibition notice was the first of its kind issued by a Minister, and the successful prosecution marked the first conviction for failing to comply with this notice.

On 12 June 2025, the Court imposed fines totalling $200,000 on Mr Pullinger and also ordered him to pay the EPA $201,487 for its investigation and legal costs.

EPA Executive Director Operations, Jason Gordon, said the judgment and the EPA’s actions represent a substantial and positive outcome for the local environment.

“We have taken significant regulatory action relating to this site, with 18 penalty notices issued and multiple successful prosecutions,” Mr Gordon said.

“This is a clear message that directors and landholders cannot walk away from their environmental responsibilities.

“The site posed a risk to Stony Creek and the surrounding environment for years, with contaminated liquids left unsecured and unaddressed despite multiple EPA directions to clean it up.

“The EPA has escalated its response to protect the surrounding waterways and hold Mr Pullinger accountable.

“We will not hesitate to pursue those who try to shirk their legal obligations to protect our environment.”

Truegain ceased operations in 2016 after PFAS contamination was detected in wastewater discharged into sewers. Over the following two years, several pollution incidents occurred when contaminated water escaped from the site’s spill containment system and flowed into Stony Creek, a tributary of the Hunter River.

In 2021, the EPA undertook urgent clean-up work to prevent additional environmental harm after rainfall events. The following year, the NSW Government compulsorily acquired the site and Property and Development NSW is overseeing a full remediation program.


Contact details:

 

Isaac Carey 0436 646 346

24-hour Media Line (02) 9995 6415 [email protected]

More from this category

  • Environment, Science
  • 15/12/2025
  • 05:00
UNSW Sydney

Waterbirds return this year, but amid long-term decline: aerial survey

Key Facts: The 2025 UNSW aerial waterbird survey shows waterbird numbers, breeding activity and wetland habitat areas remain in significant long-term decline. New data…

  • Contains:
  • Energy, Environment
  • 15/12/2025
  • 00:01
RE-Alliance

Media Release: Energy roadmap shows renewables remain key and AEMO is starting to hear regional communities

For immediate release Monday 15 December 2025 A not-for-profit working for more than a decade with regional communities at the centre of Australia’s shift to renewable energy has welcomed the release of the Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO) draft Integrated System Plan (ISP) 2026. National Director of the Renewable Energy Alliance (RE-Alliance), Andrew Bray, said AEMO’s ISP is the most comprehensive pathway to energy security by 2050. “It may sound like a lot of acronyms, but AEMO’s ISP is as close as we’ve got to a national roadmap for how we’re going to keep the lights on as Australia’s ageing…

  • Environment, Science
  • 15/12/2025
  • 00:01
UNSW

Friends with benefits: Social connections slow ageing in dolphins, too

[EMBARGOED 00:01 15/12/2025|Sydney] New research shows male bottlenose dolphins with strong friendships age more slowly than their more solitary peers. The new UNSW Sydney research reveals for the first time in any non-human species that social bonds can slow ageing at the cellular level. “Social connections are so important for health that they slow down ageing at the cellular level,” says lead author Dr Livia Gerber, who conducted the study at UNSW, and now works at CSIRO’s National Research Collections Australia. “We knew social bonds helped animals live longer, but this is the first time we’ve shown they affect the…

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.