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Brighton Councillors Asked To Back Recycling Campaign

Brighton Whitecross Street Recycling Site by Editor5807 licensed by Creative Commons on Wikimedia

Councillors are being asked to back an information campaign aimed at reducing contamination in recycling bins.

If they back the idea, the Brighton and Hove City Council campaign would also encourage people to reduce the overall amount of rubbish that they produce.

A report to the council’s City Environment, South Downs and the Sea Committee said that about 13 per cent of recycling collected in Brighton and Hove was contaminated with other rubbish, such as food waste drinks cartons and other plastics.

The report said that contaminated recycling may have to be disposed of in the same way as general waste.

The committee is due to meet next Tuesday (19 September) when councillors are also being asked to approve recycling for metal lids from glass bottles and jars in glass recycling collections.

In the past year, it said, the recycling rate was 28.3 per cent, with other waste sent to the incinerator at Newhaven where it was burnt to generate electricity for more than 20,000 homes.

Less than 1 per cent of Brighton and Hove’s waste went to landfill in 2022-23 although local homes produced an average of 552 kilograms of waste each – more than half a ton.

This was an increase from the previous year but, over the past eight years, there has been a fall of more than 10 per cent in the volume of rubbish produced.

Six new carton recycling bins have been placed – in Western Road, Lewes Road, Portland Road, King’s Esplanade, Queen’s Park Terrace and White Cross Street.

The council has appointed a “waste minimisation officer” for two years. The report said:

“This new appointment provides additional resources in the service to begin a concerted information and behaviour change campaign.”

The campaign would be aimed at reducing the volume of waste produced, increasing the levels of reuse, increasing the levels of recycling and reducing contamination of recycling bins.

The report added:

“Not only will this help improve Brighton and Hove’s waste performance but it will also help encourage further circular economy practices and principles which contributes to the city becoming carbon-neutral by 2030.”

Changes to national rules and guidance – and delays to those changes – mean that the council cannot plan to start recycling new materials at the moment, the report said.

It added that there was uncertainty over funding to bring in food waste recycling by March 2025 although a deposit return scheme for drinks containers is expected to start by October 2025.

The council has employed a new project manager to prepare for the Environment Act which is expected to include a requirement to develop a food waste collection service.

Consultations are expected next year for recyclable textiles collections and business takeback for used textiles. In 2025, in line with government proposals, a consultation is also likely on removing fees from bulky waste collections.

The City Environment, South Downs and the Sea Committee is due to meet at Hove Town Hall at 4pm on Tuesday 19 September. The meeting is scheduled to be webcast on the council’s website.

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