The Guardian Australia

UK retailers 'will not suffer financial losses' from bottle deposit scheme

- Sandra Laville

Retailers will not suffer financial losses from the introducti­on of a plastic bottle deposit return scheme (DRS) in the UK, according to an analysis of a similar system in Norway.

The environmen­t secretary, Michael Gove, has announced plans to launch a deposit system for bottles and cans in the UK, and MPs are due to debate the subject in parliament today.

At present just 43% of the 13bn plastic bottles sold each year in the UK are recycled, and 700,000 are littered every day. In Germany, a DRS was introduced in 2003 and 99% of plastic bottles are recycled.

The exact details of how the scheme will work will be announced after a consultati­on and the government has said it “will only take forward options from the consultati­on which demonstrat­e that they offer clear benefits and are resistant to fraud, and costs on businesses, consumers and the taxpayer are proportion­ate”.

Analysis of the DRS in Norway by the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) - which has lobbied for a deposit scheme for a decade found that businesses will not suffer losses from such a system run in the UK. Consumers will only suffer a financial loss if they fail to return the bottle or can, encouragin­g strong take-up of the system.

Samantha Harding, litter programme director at the CPRE, said: “This analysis of the deposit return system cycle should dispel any misconcept­ions that retailers or consumers may have about how the system will work, and more importantl­y how it is funded. No one will be out of pocket, so long as the bottles and cans are returned.”

CPRE said in order for a DRS to enjoy high return rates - in Norway the return rate is 95% - it has to collect all materials of all sizes.

“Introducin­g a system that only collected half of what it could would be a costly mistake,” she said. “We need the maximum number of retail-based return points. And it should be mandatory, as a voluntary system simply wouldn’t work.”

MPs are due to debate plastic bottle return schemes as part of measures to reduce plastic waste. The environmen­t audit committee recommende­d a DRS after its investigat­ion into plastic waste last year. It also recommende­d a levy be placed on takeaway coffee cups to cut their use and reduce littering.

 ?? Photograph: Lynne Cameron/PA ?? Less than half of the 13bn plastic bottles sold each year in the UK are recycled, and 700,000 littered every day.
Photograph: Lynne Cameron/PA Less than half of the 13bn plastic bottles sold each year in the UK are recycled, and 700,000 littered every day.

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