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Archived press release

 


Government must improve rubbish recycling record

18 October 2004

The Government must make radical policy changes if the UK is to have a recycling record to be proud of, Friends of the Earth said today. The call coincides with the launch of The Big Recycle [1] - a week of activity to encourage the public to recycle more household waste - and comes as the amount of waste created by UK homes is on the increase. Last year the amount of extra rubbish generated was equivalent to the waste from a city the size of Birmingham.

Friends of the Earth is calling for:

Friends of the Earth's waste campaigner, Georgina Bloomfield said:

"The Government must show its commitment to expanding the amount of waste we recycle by increasing its funding to ensure that every household has access to comprehensive doorstep recycling services. Wider economic measures must also be put in place so that we can reach the standards set by our European neighbours who are already recycling over half of their domestic waste."

Recent figures show only two local authorities currently recycle over 40 per cent of waste - where they provide doorstep recycling and composting services for a wide range of materials to every home [4].

In many local authority areas less than five per cent of waste was recycled in 2002/3 [5]. In Yorkshire and Humber only seven per cent of households receive a collection for five or more materials contrasting with 43 per cent of homes in the South West [6].

A recent report by the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee criticised the Government's approach to waste management and said it was unlikely to meet its target of recycling or composting a quarter of household waste by 2005 [7].

By recycling materials we can save vast amounts of energy and resources. For example, recycling an aluminium saves 95% of the energy it takes to make one from scratch.

Notes

2. Municipal Waste Management in the EU 2001 (Source: e-Digest of Environmental Statistics, February 2003) Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Netherlands 59%
Austria 58%
Germany 53%
Belgium 39%
Sweden 39%
Luxembourg 36%
Denmark 32%
Spain 28%
Finland 25%
France 25%
Italy 24%
Ireland 13%
United Kingdom 13%
Greece 9%
Portugal 4%

3. Regional household waste recycling rates for 2002/03 (Source: e-Digest of Environmental Statistics, August 2004) Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs

Household waste recycling rate by region

North East 6.6%
North West 11.2%
Yorkshire and the Humber 11.4%
East Midlands 15.2%
West Midlands 13.0%
East 19.4%
London 10.9%
South East 19.7%
South West 18.7%

4. Recycling rates from Municipal Waste Management Survey, 2002/03, Defra

Daventry District Council 44%
Lichfield District Council 43%

5. Municipal Waste Management Survey 2002/03, Defra

6. Friends of the Earth carried out a survey of recycling services offered by waste collection authorities throughout England, Wales and Northern Ireland between September 2003 and March 2004. Detailed research findings for each English region.

7. House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee, The Departmental Annual Report 2004 Fifteenth Report of Session 2003-2004 (PDF format)

Some waste facts and figures


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For further information please contact the Friends of the Earth media team on 020 7566 1649.

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