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The Sustainability Leaders list celebrates the Australasian companies that are making real progress in tackling sustainability challenges – and delivering business value along the way.

How sustainable is your company? It’s time to be recognised.

Nominations close Monday December 16, 2024.

Nominate now

Latest

Showing the way: Major brands embrace new recycling symbols

Making it easier for households to recycle packaging for food and consumer goods has won Australasian Recycling Labels a special award for Education Enabler.

  • Alexandra Cain

Transport needs to avoid becoming the nation’s biggest emitter

Without dramatic changes, this may be the last industry to decarbonise. Aurizon, the winner of the Logistics and Transport category, aims to change that with its electric locomotive.

  • Agnes King
Biomass Projects founder Richard Paterson hopes to transform Western Australia’s largest weed infestation into carbon-capturing biochar.

This trailblazer turns destructive weed into a replacement for coal

Biomass Projects has plans to build the world’s largest biochar production on a 225,000-hectare Pilbara plot that is overrun with mesquite.

  • Gus McCubbing
There are plenty of jobs in renewables.

‘Everyone wins’: Financing renewables at scale

Brighte looks to boost the renewables transition through its ‘one-stop shop’ model, winning the Banking and Financial Services category.

  • Prashant Mehra

Ideas to solve the next big climate challenges

Winners of the Sustainability Leaders list are pushing the boundaries of innovation, writes Rebecca Russell.

  • Rebecca Russell

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July

How to get to net zero with recycled building rubbish

Nu-Rock founder Maroun Rahme says reusing waste products could deliver Australia its net-zero target by 2030 as the company takes out the Property and Construction category.

  • Larry Schlesinger
Winning Group brand Appliances Online has stopped 80,000 tonnes of electronics and appliances from being dumped in landfill since it was launched in 2005.

Customers love this cool solution to getting rid of old fridges

Winning Group brand Appliances Online has stopped 80,000 tonnes of electronics and appliances from being dumped in landfill, earning the company top spot in the Retail category.

  • Gus McCubbing

New tools democratise greenhouse gas management

A digital marketplace for companies with smaller carbon footprints to buy offsets has taken out the Technology category.

  • Alexandra Cain

How Amcor gave us guilt-free cream cheese

Soft plastics are piling up in warehouses around Australia. Amcor says it has a solution, taking out the Manufacturing category.

  • Sylvia Ramsey

Would you like coffee with your concrete?

One of the world’s most polluting materials can be made less polluting. The new technology has helped Arup win the Professional Services category.

  • Michael Bleby
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AgriProve founder Matthew Warnken: “We’re not going to incrementalise our way out of these challenges, which means that now is the opportunity to innovate.”

A farming revolution built on down-to-earth thinking

Increasing carbon levels in grazing lands could remove 10 billion tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions from the atmosphere says the winner of the Agriculture category.

  • Tom McIlroy
The new platform will help farmers improve returns and be more sustainable

How Sustainability Leaders entrants were assessed

Submissions came from ASX20 companies and multinationals, early-stage ventures and public institutions, and were scored against four measurements.

  • Rebecca Russell
Orica’s emissions reduction project at Kooragang Island will abate half a million tonnes a year of carbon dioxide equivalent, says German Morales, group president for Australia and the Pacific and sustainability.

Orica crowned Australia’s most sustainable company for Impact

The explosives manufacturer is recognised for completing the biggest emissions abatement project in the Australian chemicals sector as it takes out the 2024 Sustainability Leaders award.

  • Sally Patten

December 2023

Forrest family leads Rich List plunge on packaging disrupter

Andrew and Nicola Forrest have led a star-studded fundraising for the start-up that hopes to replace polystyrene with a more sustainable insulation material.

  • Peter Ker

June 2023

There was a 25 per cent growth in entries this year, as more and more companies turn to better environmental and social outcomes, and tangible business value.

How Sustainability Leaders list entrants are assessed

There was a 25 per cent growth in entries this year as more and more companies turn to better environmental and social outcomes, and tangible business value.

  • BCG
Australian cricketer Steve Smith Smith paid $100,000 for a 10 per cent stake in Koala in 2015

Koala leads retailers in battling the war on waste

Koala is one of these five retailers proving that what’s good for the planet is also good for their bottom line.

  • Agnes King

Telstra turns the tables on disposable tech

The telco became the first internet service provider in Australia to make a modem from 85 per cent recycled plastics with the launch of its Smart Modem 3.

  • Agnes King
The 20223 Sustainability Leaders List saw a large increase in entrants focused on renewable power solution.

Renewable energy solutions firms power ahead

We celebrate this year’s list of sustainability leaders – and welcome the many new entrants among them – who are finding competitive advantage in sustainability.

  • Rebecca Russell
Pure Battery Technologies’ Sandrika Ryan and Thomas Fahrner

Alchemist energy businesses speed up green transition

Making existing renewable energy projects more efficient and more productive is key to building the market.

  • Alexandra Cain

Advisian rides the decarbonisation boom

The consulting arm of Worley says the best time to improve sustainability is in the study phase of capital projects.

  • Michael Collins
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BioPak CEO Gary Smith and BioPak founder Richard Fine.

Why this CEO created the ‘Airtasker’ of composting

Compost Connect aims to change behaviours around food packaging and waste, and influence governments.

  • Christopher Niesche
Nexport chief executive Michel van Maanen.

Nexport leading the way in getting EV buses on the road

Australia’s largest producer of zero emission buses aspires to electrify all 8000 buses in NSW.

  • Nina Hendy
IAG says it sees the effects of climate change on its customers and communities on the ground every day.

The driving purpose behind IAG’s winning action plan

The insurer says it sees the effects of climate change on its customers and communities on the ground every day.

  • Mark Eggleton
Kilter Rural founding director Cullen Gunn

Kilter Rural water fund tops list for benefits to environment and investors

Kilter Rural’s Murray-Darling Basin Balanced Water Fund is the winning agriculture entry in our Sustainability Leaders list.

  • Larry Schlesinger
Globally, since 2016 Acciona has been carbon neutral, with the aim of  moving to carbon zero by 2040, says Bede Noonan.

Acciona, Neara top Sustainability Leaders for impact and innovation

Investments in sustainability projects and improving electricity transmission have propelled infrastructure giant Acciona and software firm Neara to the top of this year’s list.

  • Sally Patten