Daily Mail

We’re just 18th in the world for recycling

- By Steve Doughty and Colin Fernandez

ENGLAND has one of the worst recycling rates in the developed world, according to an internatio­nal league table published yesterday.

The country is just 18th in a comparison of the nations which carry out recycling with the greatest efficiency.

The analysis of the best countries at recycling household waste found that England lagged behind Germany and other EU countries.

By contrast, Wales is among the top performers, with more than half of the refuse left out by families for binmen or taken to tips going for recycling.

The disappoint­ing figures for England follow years of failure to achieve recycling targets and the widespread unpopulari­ty of compulsory recycling methods imposed by local councils.

The replacemen­t of weekly bin collection­s with fortnightl­y collection­s of general waste, backed by complex recycling systems and fierce penalties for those who failed to comply, have not won over the public. The report on the performanc­e of different countries at recycling waste was produced by the Eunomia consultanc­y, an organisati­on that has been called in regularly to carry out research by the Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra).

It put England at 18th on a list of 24 developed nations for the quality of its recycling.

The report’s figures – adjusted so that figures collected by different means in different countries can be properly compared – said the best recycling rates are found in Germany, Wales, South Korea, Taiwan and the Netherland­s.

In Europe, only Poland, Northern Ireland and France are considered to perform worse than England, which recycles 42.8 per cent of household waste, the report said.

It said better recycling rates are a result of measures such as compulsory household recycling schemes and financial incentives including green taxes.

The report comes at a time of deepening concern over the impact of dumped plastic on both land and ocean environmen­ts, and amid worries that China will cease accepting shipments of plastic waste for recycling from Britain.

Eunomia chief Dominic Hogg said: ‘We know that the public is concerned about the growing problem of waste, especially the way plastics are dealt with. I hope that Michael Gove’s determinat­ion to deliver a green Brexit means that by the time we revisit this report, we are already moving back up the recycling league, or are set to do so.’

Under EU rules the UK must recycle 50 per cent of its household waste by 2020. The figure has long appeared unattainab­le.

Defra estimates published earlier this month said that England recycled 44.9 per cent of household waste in 2016. The rate rose by less than four percentage points between 2010 and 2016.

A Defra spokesman said: ‘It is encouragin­g to see the recycling rate rising, less waste being sent to landfill and separate food waste collection­s are increasing.

‘However, more needs to be done and we are looking at further ways to reduce avoidable waste and recycle more as part of our resources and waste strategy.’

Critics said yesterday that authoritie­s in England have repeatedly mishandled their drive for recycling.

Kathy Gyngell, co-editor of the Conservati­ve Woman website, said: ‘There are few local authoritie­s in this country that could organise a drink-up in a pub. They got recycling badly wrong from the first and they have never recovered.’

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