The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Group calls for bottle return scheme action

- KIERAN BEATTIE

Scotland’s deposit return scheme should face no further delays, conservati­onists claim, with new research showing 92% of the country’s beaches are littered with cans and bottles.

Every year, the Marine Conservati­on Society’s Great British Beach Clean (GBBC) tasks volunteers across the UK with scouring their local shorelines of rubbish.

For this year’s event, almost 10 miles of Scotland’s beaches were cleared by more than 1,500 hard-working participan­ts.

Over 10 days in September they filled 592 bags with litter, weighing more than two tonnes in total.

And while these results were still below the overall UK average, they also revealed some worrying data for the environmen­t.

In Scotland, 92% of the beaches cleaned were polluted with the likes of empty glass bottles, cans, and single-use plastic drinks containers.

The Marine Conservati­on Society (MCS) has now called on the Scottish Government to finally implement the “longawaite­d” deposit return scheme in order make an “instant impact” on the volume of discarded drinks washing up on our coastlines.

Initially planned for April 2021, the start date for the bottle and can recycling project has already been pushed back to July next year.

But last week Green MSP Lorna Slater, the circular economy minister, told Holyrood there is still no set timescale for when the scheme will be implemente­d.

She blamed a number of problems for the delay, including Covid, Brexit, and tax concerns.

Once the initiative is rolled out across Scotland, 20p will be added to the price of products like fizzy drinks, beer and water sold in plastic bottles, cans, and glass.

The consumer is then able to get their 20p deposit back when they give their empties to retailers over the counter or by using technology called reverse vending machines (RVM).

The machines scan returned containers, give the users their deposit, and then the waste is collected for recycling.

Catherine Gemmell, Scotland conservati­on officer at the MCS, highlighte­d the impact that previous policy decisions have had on the litter washing up on Scotland’s beaches.

It found an average of just three single-use plastic bags for every 100 metres of Scottish beach cleaned in this year’s GBBC.

In 2013, the year before the introducti­on of the 5p plastic bag charge in Scotland, that figure stood at 17 bags per 100m.

Ms Gemmell said: “The long-awaited deposit return scheme for Scotland could be another groundbrea­king policy which would have an instant impact on the amount of drinks litter we see on beaches every year.”

Zero Waste Scotland hopes the scheme could lead to 34,000 fewer plastic bottles littered in Scotland every day.

More than 17,000 return points would be implemente­d nationwide.

A spokesman for the Scottish Government said the government remains “fully committed to implementi­ng Scotland’s deposit return scheme”, and said it “will be among the most environmen­tally ambitious and accessible in Europe”.

 ?? ?? CLEAN-UP: A deposit return scheme would help to rid our beaches of cans and bottles.
CLEAN-UP: A deposit return scheme would help to rid our beaches of cans and bottles.

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