The Scotsman

Deposit return scheme ‘first big Greens challenge’

- By KATRINE BUSSEY newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Green ministers are facing their “first big test” since joining the Scottish Government amid fears from campaigner­s that the deposit return scheme for drinks cans and bottles could be delayed further.

Concern is growing that new circular economy minister Lorna Slater may be about to push the start of the initiative back further – possibly until March 2023.

In the run-up to the COP26 climate change summit in Glasgow, activists insisted that delivering deposit return on time "really is a make or break for the new government's environmen­tal reputation".

With the scheme currently due to come into force from July 2022, it is also feared an eight-month delay could result in an additional 28 million cans and bottles being dumped as litter unnecessar­ily.

That figure is based on research for the Have You Got the Bottle? campaign, which estimated the Scottish system could reduce littering by as much as by 50,000 plastic bottles, 60,000 drinks cans, and 7,000 glass bottles every day.

It has now been more than four years since First Minister Nicola Sturgeon confirmed that a deposit return scheme would be introduced in Scotland – with the country the first part of the UK to commit to this.

Under the scheme, it is proposed that shoppers will pay anaddition­al20pcharg­ewhen buying drinks in cans and bottles, with these fees refunded to them when they return the empties for recycling.

But its introducti­on has already been pushed back because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Kim Pratt, circular economy

campaigner at Friends of the Earth Scotland, said: “Scotland's deposit return system is an important opportunit­y to change the way materials are used and to reduce our climate emissions. It will also change the way people think about waste.

“The scheme has already suffered a major delay, and any further delay will inevitably draw comparison­s to the fiascos of the Scottish Parliament building and Edinburgh trams.”

She added: “This is the first big test of the Greens' ability to deliver in government. Will they look to the successes of other countries, like Lithuania or the Netherland­s, and deliver an ambitious deposit return system without further delay? Or will they be swayed by cautious civil servants and the vested interests of the supermarke­t sector?”

Ms Slater recently told MSPS that the Scottish Government "recognise the significan­t impact that Covid-19 and the UK'S exit from the European Union have had on the drinks industry and other sectors with responsibi­lity for delivering Scotland's deposit return scheme" – with these comments sparking fears of another delay.

Catherine Gemmell, of the Marine Conservati­on Society in Scotland, said: "A deposit returnsyst­emremainst­hesimplest possible measure to help achieve a circular economy. If this can't be delivered on time, after four years, what hope do we have for more ambitious measures in the future?

“Our volunteers have been cleaning up Scotland's coasts and recording litter data throughout September.”

 ?? ?? 0 A delay could see millions of bottles and cans not being recycled
0 A delay could see millions of bottles and cans not being recycled

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom