Skip to content
Wed. Dec 24th, 2025
  • About
  • Partner with Us
  • Press Release Guidelines
  • Op-ed Guidelines
  • Indonesia
Primary Menu
  • Home
  • Latest
  • News
  • Rilis
  • Brief
  • Interview
  • Opinion
  • Figure
  • Youth
  • SDGs
  • Topics
  • #LetterfromtheFounder
  • Membership Levels
  • Membership Account
  • Your Profile
  • Log In
  • Membership Account
  • Your Profile
  • Membership Levels
  • Membership Invoice
  • Membership Billing
  • public-menu
    • NewsInformative and light. Bringing you stories from events, developments, innovations, policies, programs, good practices, reports, research findings, conferences, and movements in governments, businesses, and civil society in the Asia Pacific and beyond through evergreen soft news.
    • Rilis
  • Home
  • Featured
  • Queen Victoria Market’s Paths to Sustainability
  • Featured
  • News

Queen Victoria Market’s Paths to Sustainability

Queen Victoria Market’s sustainability target is to produce zero carbon and send zero waste to landfill by 2027.
by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago 3 min read
visitors at queen Victoria market food halls

Queen Victoria Market, Melbourne, Australia. | Photo by Queen Victoria Market.

Spread the love

Opened in 1878, Melbourne’s Queen Victoria Market is an iconic part of Australia’s National Heritage. It has sustained itself for 144 years through many transformations—from colonial era Melbourne with the 19th-century metropolitan market characteristics to today’s bustling market slash historic landmark. Now, it’s undergoing another transformation and is on its way to achieving its sustainability targets.

Solar Power

“Solar panels were first introduced at the market in 2003 when 1,328 photovoltaic panels were installed with the support of the City of Melbourne – it was the largest of its type in the southern hemisphere at that time,” said Queen Victoria Market CEO Stan Liacos.

In August, Melbourne powered up 650 solar panels in the Queen Victoria Market precinct with a plan to add 900 more in the coming months, generating a total of 900,000 kWh a year. According to city officials, this new system will reduce the market’s electricity cost by $100,000 annually.

Rohan Leppert, Environment Portfolio Lead Councilor, added, “The installation of more than 1,500 solar panels at Queen Victoria Market will save 1,300 tons of carbon emissions each year.”

This transformation to renewable energy is a part of the Queen Victoria Market Renewal Program, to be completed by the end of 2024.

Less Waste

Queen Victoria Market banned single-use plastic bags and straws in 2019. Visitors can bring their own shopping bags or baskets, hire trolleys, or reuse cardboard boxes from nearby Pick-A-Box stations. Food stalls at Night Markets must also use biodegradable plates, cutleries, and straws.

The market’s recent sustainability achievement is recycling 80% of its waste: cardboard and polystyrene are recycled; offcuts from butchers and fishmongers are turned into pet food; and organic waste (coffee grounds, fruit, and vegetables) is converted to energy. Plus, the market has on-site worm farms that turn smaller volumes of food scraps into nutrient-filled fertilizers.

Everyone Contributes

Queen Victoria Market’s sustainability target is to produce zero carbon and send zero waste to landfill by 2027. For a large market that spans seven hectares with over 600 small businesses, it’s quite an ambitious target that needs all hands on deck.

Liacos attributes the market’s achievements to collaborations with processing facilities and its diverse community. For instance, the partnership with Thrive Refugee Enterprise, which selects refugees and asylum seekers to open their own stalls, provides an opportunity for the market to rekindle connections with immigrant business owners.

“I recognize our traders and visitors who have individually contributed to minimizing the market’s impact on the environment to date. From shoppers bringing their own bags and trollies, to traders adapting their systems to minimize waste and energy use, every small action makes a difference,” said Liacos.

Spread the love
Nazalea Kusuma
Managing Editor at Green Network Asia | Website |  + postsBio

Naz adalah Manajer Publikasi Digital Internasional di Green Network Asia. Ia pernah belajar Ilmu Perencanaan Wilayah dan Kota dan tinggal di beberapa kota di Asia Tenggara. Pengalaman pribadi ini memperkaya persepektifnya akan masyarakat dan budaya yang beragam. Naz memiliki sekitar satu dekade pengalaman profesional sebagai penulis, editor, penerjemah, dan desainer kreatif.

  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    5 Food System Actors That Have Taken the 123 Pledge to Reduce Food Loss & Waste
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    The Potential and Power of K-pop Fandoms as Global Communities
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Lebanon’s Education Crisis Is Not Getting Better
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Reviving Kazakhstan’s Prehistoric Ecosystems, the Golden Steppe
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Dugongs & Friends: Abu Dhabi’s Marine and Coastal Restoration Efforts
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Glass Onion: Layers of Hydrogen Energy
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Three Tips for a More Sustainable Gift-Giving
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    How Schools Can Bring Change with Sustainability Education and Program
  • Nazalea Kusuma
    Balancing Human Rights and Climate Change

Continue Reading

Previous: Public Policy Instruments to Respond to the Global Pandemic Threats
Next: Interdisciplinary Research: In Search of the Complete Truth

Related Stories

Test Custom Feature Image 1 min read
  • News

Test Custom Feature Image

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 3 months ago
a blue roam rapid mass transit bus Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya 1 min read
  • Featured
  • News

Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya

by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago
a collage of four photos showing FedEx volunteers in the middle of beach clean-up activities. FedEx Engages Employees with Beach Clean-Up Initiative 3 min read
  • News

FedEx Engages Employees with Beach Clean-Up Initiative

by Kresentia Madina 3 years ago
a hand pointing a pencil at charts titled “Finance Review” plastered on a whiteboard Come Back Stronger: Building Philippines’ Resilient Economy Post-COVID-19 3 min read
  • Featured
  • News

Come Back Stronger: Building Philippines’ Resilient Economy Post-COVID-19

by Kresentia Madina 3 years ago
Abigail Lovell, Chief Sustainability Officer of Experian. Inside Experian’s Sustainability Journey: An Interview with Chief Sustainability Officer Abigail Lovell 7 min read
  • Featured
  • Interview

Inside Experian’s Sustainability Journey: An Interview with Chief Sustainability Officer Abigail Lovell

by Marlis Afridah 3 years ago
overhead view of fruit peels and other food scraps in a plastic bag 5 Food System Actors That Have Taken the 123 Pledge to Reduce Food Loss & Waste 3 min read
  • News

5 Food System Actors That Have Taken the 123 Pledge to Reduce Food Loss & Waste

by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago

You may have missed

Test Custom Feature Image 1 min read
  • News

Test Custom Feature Image

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 3 months ago
a quite large body of water covered with yellow algae under blue skies Test premium post 1 min read
  • Brief

Test premium post

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 2 years ago
Test Artikel Free 2 min read
  • Rilis

Test Artikel Free

by Ahmad Bagwi Rifai 2 years ago
a blue roam rapid mass transit bus Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya 1 min read
  • Featured
  • News

Electric Vehicles Roam the Roads of Kenya

by Nazalea Kusuma 3 years ago
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • FAQ
  • Contact Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Spotify
  • Pinterest
  • Telegram
  • Etsy
  • Tokopedia
  • Media Link 11
  • Media Link 12
  • Media Link 13
  • Media Link 14
  • Media Link 15
Copyright © All rights reserved.