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Towards Zero Waste Outcomes –Building a Sustainable Future

Taliesin MaynardHead of Waste InfrastructureDepartment for Environment and Rural Affairs

• The SD / well-being journey

• Recycling performance and key policy drivers

• Where next for municipal waste?

My focus today

“A sustainable environment, where the impact of waste in Wales is reduced to within our environmental limits by 2050.

This means that waste production and management will be at ‘One Planet’ levels”

Aspiration

Towards Zero Waste, June 2010

Waste preventionSCP

100% recycling

2010

2050

Waste prevention70% recycling

2025

The sustainable development journey

2006Government of Wales Act

s.79 “Sustainable Development”

s.60 “Well-being”

2009One Wales: One Planet

Sustainable Development Scheme

2012Sustainable Development

Consultation

2015 Well-being of Future

Generations (Wales) Act 2015

2016National Indicators for

Wales

2018Route Map for a more

Efficient (Circular) Economy in Wales

1998Government of Wales Act

S.121 “Sustainable Development”

2000‘Learning to live

differently’ Sustainable Development

Scheme

2004Starting to Live DifferentlySustainable Development

Scheme

2017National Strategy, ‘Prosperity for All’

‘Economic Action Plan’‘Natural Resources Policy

Wise About Waste 2002

Towards Zero Waste 2010

Well-being goalsA Prosperous Wales• An innovative, productive and low

carbon society which recognises the limits of the global environment and therefore uses resources efficiently and proportionately (including acting on climate change);

• and which develops a skilled and well-educated population in an economy which generates wealth and provides employment opportunities, allowing people to take advantage of the wealth generated through securing decent work.

Recycling performance

Largest drivers

• Statutory recycling targets• Ring-fenced funding• Landfill Allowance Scheme• Collections Blueprint• Strategic investment

programmes• Collaborative change• Infrastructure delivery

Source: StatsWales / BBC

Improving collection servicesCollections “Blueprint”• Weekly separate collection

– Dry recyclables via ‘kerbside sort’

– Food waste• Modern lightweight, multi-

compartment vehicles • Fortnightly collection of residual

waste– With reduced capacity

• ‘No side waste’ policies• High-quality separate collections

at Household Waste Recycling Centres

Current status• 70% of LAs using the Blueprint

or variants• 99% of population receives a

separate food waste collection• 16 LAs providing separate

Absorbent Hygiene Products (AHP) collection

• Residual waste collections– Three-weekly (5 LAs )– Four-weekly (1 LA)

• Investment in household engagement and participation

• Enforcement as a last resort

Regional procurement hubsDelivery outcomes (2009-18)

• 21 LAs / 10 contracts• 5 anaerobic digestion plants• 2 energy recovery facilities

• £1.4 bn total cost• £536m savings• 60MWe

• Equivalent 95,000 homes

• Landfill diversion (tpa)• 140,000 (food waste)• 645,000 (residual waste)

Developed treatment capacity

Environment (Wales) Act 2016Part 1: Sustainable management of natural resources – enables Wales’

resources to be managed in a more proactive, sustainable and joined-up way

Part 2: Climate change – provides the Welsh Ministers with powers to put in place statutory emission reduction targets, including at least an 80% reduction in emissions by 2050 and carbon budgeting to support their delivery

Part 4: Collection and disposal of waste – Welsh Ministers can require:

• All businesses and public sector bodies to keep recyclable materials separate at source (including food waste)

• Recyclable materials to be collected separately• A ban on recyclable wastes to Energy from Waste• A ban on the disposal of food waste to sewer (not including

households)

A ban on recyclable materials to landfill – powers to bring in regulations already exist under the Waste (Wales) Measure 2010

Where next for Wales?

• Revised waste strategy and new route map for a resource efficient (circular) economy

• More infrastructure– Reprocessing– Not co-mingled MRFs

• Increase the use of recyclate in Wales• Tackle excess and non-recyclable packaging• Extended producer responsibility• Increase recycling

– Behaviour change campaign– Consult on 80% target for 2035

“Recycling – who really leads the world?”

Source: Eunomia, December 2017

Household waste reduction

2,800

2,850

2,900

2,950

3,000

3,050

3,100

3,150

1,150

1,200

1,250

1,300

1,350

1,400

1,450

1,500

1,550

1,600

1,650

Hou

seho

ld arisings (tho

usan

d tonn

es)

household arisings Population

popu

latio

n (tho

usan

ds)

7% municipal recycling2000

LandfillAllowanceScheme2004

2017/18• Household

arisings c. 600 ktpa• Recycling 63%

Targeting black bag waste

Source: WRAP Cymru, June 2016

Food25%

Plastic16%

Textiles6%

AHP9%

Aluminium1%

www.cymru.gov.uk

Towards Zero Waste Outcomes –Building a Sustainable Future

taliesin.maynard@gov.wales03000 255584