Irish Daily Mail

Household clearouts may spark a recycling crisis

- By David Young

AN upsurge in household clearouts during lockdown could risk Ireland’s compliance with EU recycling targets, an industry figure has claimed.

Difficulti­es in recycling electrical waste present a huge challenge, the head of recycling scheme WEEE Ireland said.

WEEE (Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment) Ireland is involved in the recycling of e-waste left at designated collection centres across the country.

According to its annual report, 38,594 tonnes of waste electrical items and the equivalent of more than 44million used AA portable batteries were collected in the country in 2019.

That represente­d a new national record of 10.89kg of e-waste recycled per head of population last year – a rise of 6.2% on 2018, according to WEEE Ireland.

Its CEO Leo Donovan said the total saw Ireland emerge as one of the best-performing countries in Europe, meeting an

EU target to recover the equivalent of 65% of the average weight of all new electrical equipment placed on the market over the three preceding years.

However, Mr Donovan warned that Ireland could struggle to meet the 65% benchmark figure this year if an expected glut of waste electrical items is not diverted from landfill.

‘Households have used the lockdown to carry out extended spring cleaning, and it is vital that these end-of-life electrical items do not end up in landfill, or worse illegally dumped, destroying the progress that we have made as a nation,’ he said.

‘We are urging consumers to avoid an e-waste crisis by recycling for free at their local authority recycling centres and participat­ing retailers.’

Of the 19million pieces of e-waste that were recovered in 2019, there were 3.2million lamps and light bulbs, 334,000 large household appliances, 194,000 TVs and monitors and 122,000 fridges,

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