Shropshire Star

Government vows to end ‘throwaway society’ with bottle-return scheme

New regulations have now been introduced to enable the appointment of a managing body for the scheme in April this year.

By contributor By Nina Lloyd, PA Political Correspondent
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A stock picture of someone recycling cans
The European-style initiative is scheduled to launch in October 2027 (Andy Butterton/PA)

Ministers have pledged to end “throwaway society” as laws paving the way for a bottle-return scheme come into force on Monday.

The European-style initiative will see people charged a deposit when buying a plastic, steel or aluminium container before receiving the money back when they hand it in for recycling at a collection point.

New parliamentary regulations have now been introduced to enable the appointment of a managing body for the scheme in April this year ahead of its scheduled launch in October 2027.

Queen’s Birthday Honours List 2021
Environment minister Mary Creagh said the measures would help to end ‘throwaway society’

The UK Government has looked to countries such as Germany, Sweden and Ireland, the former of which has seen an estimated 98% return rate under its own deposit return scheme (DRS), in developing the programme.

Ministers hope the scheme, covering England and Northern Ireland, will reduce littering in waterways and on streets, boost recycling and help protect wildlife.

Research by the Marine Conservation Society showed 97% of surveyed UK beaches were polluted with drinks-related items in 2023, while the Government estimates 6.5 billion single-use containers go to waste in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland annually.

Environment minister Mary Creagh said: “This Government will clean up Britain and end the throwaway society.

“This is a vital step as we stop the avalanche of rubbish that is filling up our streets, rivers and oceans and protect our treasured wildlife. Turning trash into cash also delivers on our Plan for Change by kickstarting clean growth, ensuring economic stability, more resilient supply chains and new green jobs.”

Northern Ireland environment minister Andrew Muir, said: “I have ambitious goals to protect our climate, drive green growth and reduce unnecessary waste. The creation of a deposit return scheme plays a key part in delivering those goals.

“The introduction of the new parliamentary regulations is a significant step in that process and signals our commitment to move forward together to make those ambitions a reality.”

The Scottish Government is expected to align its DRS to match the one backed by MPs.

The Welsh Government pulled out of the UK-wide approach last year and has always maintained that glass would be part of its scheme.

Opposition critics have said the scheme will damage businesses and increase the burden on consumers.

Shadow business secretary Andrew Griffith said: “Labour’s levy on packaging is another cost for hard-pressed families, pushing up the price of the weekly shop.

“This Government talks about growth, but words are cheap. When you look at their actions, every day they are shackling our economy with higher taxes and more red tape on business.

“Under new leadership, the Conservatives are unafraid to call out schemes dreamed up in Whitehall that will do more harm than good.”

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