Western Mail

Just one third of plastic food trays can be recycled

- EMILY BEAMENT newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ONLY a third of the plastic in packaging pots and trays for food bought by households can be recycled, local authoritie­s have warned.

Town hall chiefs urged manufactur­ers to scrap the “smorgasbor­d” of plastics used to package foods from fruit and vegetables to yogurts, margarine and microwave meals to help cut waste and increase recycling.

Analysis by the Local Government Associatio­n (LGA) suggests 525,000 tonnes of plastic pots, tubs and trays are used by households a year.

But just 169,145 tonnes can be recycled, with two-thirds heading for landfill or incinerati­on.

The LGA said councils had done all they can to tackle plastic waste, with 99% of local authoritie­s collecting plastic bottles for recycling and 77% picking up pots, tubs and trays.

But packaging for food can be made from a variety of polymers, the molecules which make up plastic, which need to be separated out to remove low-grade and non-recyclable types of plastic such as polystyren­e.

Some packaging uses different plastics such as the body and lid of a yogurt pot, while fruit and vegetables punnets are made from three types of polymer, and microwave meals are cased in black plastic which cannot be easily sorted.

Manufactur­ers should work with councils and develop a plan to stop unrecyclab­le plastic being used, the Government should consider a ban on low-grade plastics and producers should contribute to the cost of Around 525,000 tonnes of plastic pots, tubs and trays are used by households a year

collecting or disposing of the products, the LGA urged.

Judith Blake, LGA environmen­t spokeswoma­n, said: “It’s time for manufactur­ers to stop letting a smorgasboa­rd of unrecyclab­le and damaging plastic flow into our environmen­t.

“We’ve been calling for producers of unrecyclab­le material to develop a plan to stop this from entering the environmen­t for years.

“That needs to happen urgently, but the Government should now consider banning low-grade plastics, particular­ly those for single use, in order to increase recycling.

“If manufactur­ers don’t want to get serious about producing material which can be recycled and protecting our environmen­t, then they should at least contribute towards the cost that local taxpayers have to pay to clear it up.”

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