The Welsh government has committed ensuring companies responsible for the most commonly-littered items cover the clean-up costs.
The Welsh government has echoed Scotland in committing to ensure companies responsible for the most commonly-littered items that ‘scourge streets, communities and the countryside’, cover the clean-up costs.
Alongside other UK nations, Wales has introduced new ‘polluter pays’ rules to make businesses which place packaged goods onto the market pay for their waste to be recycled.
Under the new rules, a standard recycling logo will be required on all packaging to help consumers know what they can put in their recycling bins.
Brand owners, importers, distributers and online marketplaces will be charged according to the amount and type of packaging they place on the market.
Industry will be ‘penalised’ if their packaging is harder to reuse or recycle or if they fail to hit recycling targets, the Welsh government says. The fees they pay will be used to fund improved kerbside collections of packaging waste from households.
Payments to local authorities for the handling of packaging waste will begin in 2024.
Deputy Minister for Climate Change Lee Waters said: “How did we get to a point where a quick snack can be wrapped up in materials that take hundreds of years to break down?
We’re proud to be introducing these landmark changes which will lead to producers to think about the packaging they are putting on the market and help to incentivise recycling, alongside our fellow governments in the UK
“When littered, packaging can wreak havoc on our wildlife and our health. It doesn’t disappear when you have finished with it, even when disposed of correctly, costing the taxpayer dearly.
“We’re proud to be introducing these landmark changes which will lead to producers to think about the packaging they are putting on the market and help to incentivise recycling, alongside our fellow governments in the UK.
“We are going further again, by committing to charge producers if their items are ‘commonly littered’.
We will not shy away from the challenges ahead. Since devolution, we have worked incredibly hard to turn around our recycling record, from being one of the world’s worst to one of the best.
“With a Team Wales effort we can create a real circular economy where we recycle and reuse, strengthening our local supply chains, reducing our reliance on imports and protecting the planet. World events show us just how urgent this is.”
Wales, along with England and Northern Ireland, will also introduce a Deposit Return Scheme, which will include PET glass bottles, steel and aluminium cans. Wales has diverged to follow a similar style as intended for Scotland, by committing that glass bottles will also be included in the scheme.
Larger coffee shops and fast food chains will also be required to have dedicated recycling bins in-store from 2024 for the collection of paper-based disposable cups.
The Welsh Government has ambitious plans to become a Zero Waste Nation by 2050.