WE NEED TO REDUCE, REUSE AND RECYCLE MORE IN THE EAST MIDLANDS

Environmental Panorama
International
January of 2007

 

Holly Smith - 12-Jan-2007 - This week, the Environment Agency has published the latest figures on what happens to the waste that we throw away.

The announcement includes information about the free space remaining in our East Midlands Landfills. We have only enough room for 8 more years of waste if we carry on throwing it away at the current rates.

At the beginning of 2005 there were approximately 72,000 cubic metres of space left in the East Midlands landfills. This would equate to approximately just 192 swimming pools of room left to fill!

The announcement reinforces our plea to people in the East Midlands to reduce, reuse and recycle as much of our waste as possible.

Barbara Young, Chief Executive of the Environment Agency, said: "The good news is we are recycling more and have sent nine per cent less waste to landfill in England and Wales since 2001. However, the report also highlights that we need to improve our reuse and recycling of waste and ideally, not produce it in the first place."

"Landfill should be the last resort for waste that we can’t recover or recycle, as it is not sustainable to keep sending it to landfill. The data give a clear indication of which regions have the greatest challenges. The space available to fill with waste has fallen nationally by more than 30% in some areas since 1998/9."

"These figures are projections and do not necessarily mean that we will physically run out of landfill space, because new sites may open. This report will be helpful to local authorities who are responsible for handling and managing municipal waste.

"This is an example where both business and consumers need to look to reduce, reuse and recycle more. By making small changes, we can work towards reducing our dependence on landfills as we are still burying too much of our rubbish."

The data for the year 2004/5 announced today shows that nationally:

We are recycling at an increasing rate - 23.5% for municipal waste (rising in England to 27.1% in 2005/6 according to Defra) and 44% for industrial waste;

We are recovering and re-using more waste - waste inputs at material recovery and composting sites have tripled since 2001 to 5.3m tonnes;

There are fewer hazardous waste disposal sites - only twelve commercial land fill sites and 50 private sites are licensed, concentrated in a central belt between Lancashire and Northamptonshire. No sites exist in Wales and only one in the South West of England;

Overall production of hazardous waste has been falling gradually since 2001. This trend was interrupted by an increase of 50% in hazardous construction and demolition waste to landfill in 2004 (up by more than half a million tonnes), as contaminated land clearance schemes were brought forward to beat restrictions imposed by the Landfill Directive;

200,000 premises registered as producers of hazardous waste and 1,000 companies were involved in its transport, treatment of disposal;

Out of 1,000 licensed landfill sites operational last year, only 350 were accepting municipal waste.
The report also highlights that landfilling is set to become more expensive as we move our waste greater distances which in turn means more harmful emissions into the air. By reducing waste sent to landfill, we can reduce the impact waste management has on our environment.

The data is published on the Environment Agency website visit www.environment-agency.gov.uk

Notes to editors

Some facts and figures about waste in the East Midlands;

6.4 million tonnes of waste went to landfill and almost 5.5 million tonnes of waste went to treatment and transfer facilities in 2004/5.
Landfill deposits fell by 30% between 2000/1 and 2004/5 while waste inputs to treatment increased by 75% and transfer by 44%.
The region has become a significant importer of hazardous waste since 2002; more than twice as much hazardous waste from elsewhere in England and Wales came into the region for treatment or disposal than was produced locally.

More effort needed to 'reduce, reuse and recycle' says Environment Agency

Head Office Press Office - 11-Jan-2007 - The Environment Agency today (Thursday, 11 January 2007) called on the nation to reduce, reuse and recycle as much of our waste as possible.

The call comes as the Environment Agency publishes the latest figures on what happens to our waste in England and Wales.

Barbara Young, Chief Executive of the Environment Agency, said: "The good news is we are recycling more and have sent nine per cent less waste to landfill in England and Wales since 2001. However, the report also highlights that we need to improve our reuse and recycling of waste and ideally, not produce it in the first place.

"Landfill should be the last resort for waste that we can’t recover or recycle, as it is not sustainable to keep sending it to landfill. The data give a clear indication of which regions have the greatest challenges. For example if we continue to landfill at current rates, existing landfill capacity in Wales, East Anglia and London could be full by the end of the decade. The space available to fill with waste has fallen by more than 30% in some areas since 1998/9.

"These figures are projections and do not necessarily mean that we will physically run out of landfill space, because new sites may open. This report will be helpful to local authorities who are responsible for handling and managing municipal waste.

"There are examples of where both businesses and consumers can reduce, reuse and recycle more.

Take Christmas as an example - on average this Christmas we will have used an extra 1000 million bottles and glass containers, and 500 million drinks cans, yet we don’t end up recycling more of them."

"This is an example where both business and consumers need to look to reduce, reuse and recycle more. By making small changes, we can work towards reducing our dependence on landfills as we are still burying too much of our rubbish."

The data for the year 2004/5 shows:

We are recycling at an increasing rate - 23.5% for municipal waste (rising in England to 27.1% in 2005/6 according to Defra) and 44% for industrial waste;

We are recovering and re-using more waste - waste inputs at material recovery and composting sites have tripled since 2001 to 5.3m tonnes;

There are fewer hazardous waste disposal sites - only twelve commercial land fill sites and 50 private sites are licensed, concentrated in a central belt between Lancashire and Northamptonshire. No sites exist in Wales and only one in the South West of England;

Overall production of hazardous waste has been falling gradually since 2001. This trend was interrupted by an increase of 50% in hazardous construction and demolition waste to landfill in 2004 (up by more than half a million tonnes), as contaminated land clearance schemes were brought forward to beat restrictions imposed by the Landfill Directive;

200,000 premises registered as producers of hazardous waste and 1,000 companies were involved in its transport, treatment of disposal;

Out of 1,000 licensed landfill sites operational last year, only 350 were accepting municipal waste.

The report also highlights that landfilling is set to become more expensive as we move our waste greater distances which in turn means more harmful emissions into the air. By reducing waste sent to landfill, we can reduce the impact waste management has on our environment.

Barbara Young added: "Defra’s Waste Strategy is currently under review and we hope it will reinforce the need to produce less waste and recover, glass, paper and other raw materials in greater quantities as we apply new methods to deal with our waste. This will present new business opportunities as new markets develop for the raw materials previously disposed of as waste."

 
Source: Environment Agency – United Kingdom (http://www.environment-agency.gov.uk)
 
 
 
 

 

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