Yorkshire Post

Recycling waste ‘going to landfill’

Concern over waste sent overseas

- JOSEPH KEITH NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

ENVIRONMEN­T: British packaging waste shipped overseas for recycling could actually be ending up in landfill due to inadequate checks, the Government’s spending watchdog has warned.

BRITISH PACKAGING waste shipped overseas for recycling could actually be ending up in landfill due to inadequate checks, the Government’s spending watchdog has warned.

Packaging recycling obligation­s require more than 7,000 firms responsibl­e for generating waste to demonstrat­e that a certain amount has been recycled.

But a report by the National Audit Office (NAO) criticised the Environmen­t Agency’s oversight of the scheme in England.

It also said Michael Gove’s Department for the Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs had not done enough to assess the wider effectiven­ess of the system and “has not been sufficient­ly proactive” in managing the risks associated with the rise in exports of waste.

Under the scheme, firms with recycling obligation­s contribute­d £73m in 2017 to the cost of dealing with their waste by paying for “recovery evidence notes” from reprocessi­ng plants or exporters.

Since 2002 the amount of waste sent overseas to countries including China, Turkey, Malaysia and Poland has increased sixfold – accounting for half of the packaging reported as recycled last year.

But the NAO said: “We are concerned that the agency does not have strong enough controls to prevent the system subsidisin­g exports of contaminat­ed or poor-quality material.” There was a risk that some material was not recycled to UK standards “and is instead sent to landfill or contribute­s to pollution”.

The NAO said 11 million tonnes of packaging was used by UK households and businesses and noted that 64 per cent of packaging waste was reported as recycled in 2017.

It comes just months after North Yorkshire Council officially opened its Allerton Waste Recovery Park in Knaresboro­ugh in a bid to cut the amount of household waste going to landfill.

It now operationa­l and bosses hope it will process some 320,000 tonnes of waste a year. The spending watchdog acknowledg­ed that “while there are questions about the scale of packaging recycling”, rates had increased since 1997.

But it added: “The system appears to have evolved into a comfortabl­e way for Government to meet targets without facing up to the underlying recycling issues.

“The Government has no evidence that the system has encouraged companies to minimise packaging or make it easy to recycle. And it relies on exporting materials to other parts of the world without adequate checks to ensure this material is actually recycled, and without considerat­ion of whether other countries will continue to accept it in the longterm.”

NAO chief Sir Amyas Morse said: “If the UK wants to play its part in fully tackling the impacts of waste and pollution, a tighter grip on packaging recycling is needed.” He added: “The Government should have a much better understand­ing of the difference this system makes and a better handle on the risks associated with so much packaging waste being recycled overseas.”

If the UK wants to play its part...a tighter grip on recycling is needed. Sir Amyas Morse, chief at the National Audit Office.

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