Daily Record

Eco scheme bosses laughing all the way to the bottle bank

- By chRiS Mccall

THE boss of a company in charge of the controvers­ial recycling scheme has been blasted after he was revealed to be earning £300,000 per year.

David Harris and other executives at Circularit­y Scotland Ltd will receive a combined £670,000 in annual salary and fees.

The firm was set up as a non-profit by the Scottish Government to administer the deposit return scheme (DRS), which has faced repeated delays and questions over its operation.

It involves shoppers paying an extra 20p when purchasing drinks in a can or bottle, with the deposit returned when they bring back the empty container for recycling.

Industry figures have criticised the scheme and two of the SNP leadership candidates – Kate Forbes and Ash Regan – have said it needs a rethink or should be put on hold. Humza Yousaf has said small producers should initially be exempt.

Blair Bowman, a whisky industry consultant and a vocal critic of the DRS, said: “No wonder David Harris is so desperate to make sure DRS isn’t halted. Businesses are folding and the directors of CSL are profiting from a DRS monopoly. This is unacceptab­le.

“This whole thing has nothing to do with the environmen­t and everything to do with money. He is laughing all the way to the bank, while drinks businesses are forced to sign up to a legally obligated yet totally unworkable DRS. This DRS mess is absolutely disgracefu­l.”

Fergus Ewing, an SNP MSP who has also slammed the DRS, told a national newspaper: “The public will ultimately be the payers for the costs of this scheme, including the salaries of its bosses, with the costs of beverages rising by far more than 20 pence.

“The payments to the CEO and chair are simply outrageous because the scheme is a disaster and, unless halted, will become a certain catastroph­e. Calls to halt the scheme are now coming from every sector of business impacted.

“Circularit­y Scotland has totally failed to understand how the current system of recycling works and perhaps that is because they failed to listen to – or even meet – those who know most about it.

“Some major players were not afforded meetings, others did not get replies to requests to meet.”

Circular economy minister

Lorna Slater has insisted the DRS will launch in August as planned. The company is funded by industry rather than government and ministers claim they have no involvemen­t in the recruitmen­t of staff or their pay levels.

Circularit­y Scotland said: “We communicat­e all senior executive salary informatio­n to our members and benchmark these against similar post in the industry.

“The DRS is one of the largest environmen­tal infrastruc­ture schemes ever establishe­d in the UK and the executive team have been appointed due to their unrivalled expertise in developing and implementi­ng large-scale projects of this nature.”

 ?? ?? TRaSheD The deposit return scheme has been roundly criticised
TRaSheD The deposit return scheme has been roundly criticised
 ?? ?? SUPeR SalaRy David Harris picked up £300,000 in one year
SUPeR SalaRy David Harris picked up £300,000 in one year

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