The Malta Business Weekly

Plastic recycling firms accused of abusing market

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The plastics recycling industry faces an investigat­ion amid reports firms are illegally profiting from the market and in some cases polluting rivers.

The Environmen­t Agency, the regulator, confirmed it had set up an investigat­ive team and was pursuing "several lines of enquiry".

It comes as councils cut back their plastics recycling services amid a fall in demand for exports to China.

Importers are said to be worried about high contaminat­ion levels in UK waste.

Britain sends about two-thirds of its plastic packaging waste abroad every year, including plastic bottles, yoghurt pots and other items.

Exporters charge retailers and manufactur­ers a rate per tonne for plastic waste, and retailers are allowed to use these payments as proof they are meeting their recycling obligation­s. But MPs have criticised the system for being open to fraud.

As first reported by the Guardian, allegation­s the Environmen­t Agency is understood to be investigat­ing include:

• Exporters are illegally claiming for tens of thousands of tonnes of plastic waste which might not exist

• Plastic waste is not being recy

cled and is being left to leak into

rivers and oceans

• UK firms accused of shipping contaminat­ed waste - when nonrecycla­ble items are mixed in with recyclable­s items - are being allowed to continue exporting. According to the Guardian, data passed to the EA shows a huge difference between the amount of packaging exports recorded by HM Customs, compared with the amount UK exporters claim to have shipped.

The newspaper, which analysed the data, said British exporters claimed to have exported 35,135 tonnes more plastic than HM Customs recorded.

It also reported that six UK exporters of plastic waste have had their licences suspended or cancelled in the last three months. One had had 57 containers of plastic waste stopped at UK ports over the last three years due to concerns over contaminat­ion.

The UK plastic waste export industry is said to be worth £50m year.

An EA spokesman did not comment on specific claims, but said: "Waste crime damages lives, livelihood­s and the environmen­t.

"We have a specialist central investigat­ive team and dedicated staff up and down the country who tackle it. We take seriously all allegation­s of fraud and... will bring fraudsters and criminals to justice."

A National Audit Office inquiry earlier this year warned that the current system was open to abuse and was not being monitored properly.

It said that the financial incentive for companies to fraudulent­ly claim they had recycled plastic packaging was "higher than for any other material".

"There is therefore a risk that some of it is not recycled under equivalent standards to the UK and is instead sent to landfill or contribute­s to pollution," it said.

On top of that, this year, five export firms flagged as high risk are still operating and 33 considered to be of medium risk are also still accredited to export waste.

It comes after China and Vietnam have stopped importing foreign plastic waste amid concerns about high contaminat­ion levels.

This has had a knock-on effect on UK local authoritie­s, many of which have cut their plastic recycling services amid a build-up of waste.

Basingstok­e and Deane Borough Council has told residents to recycle only plastic bottles, leaving all other plastics in normal rubbish bins.

And Swindon Borough Council has told residents to put mixed plastic waste, such as yoghurt pots, into their regular bins so it can be incinerate­d and turned into fuel.

It said the main benefit of the temporary measure was "to prevent the risk of it ending up in overseas landfill or worse".

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