Extra recycling bin or sack coming for Wiltshire households

The Council's confirmed changes aimed at increasing recycling

Author: Faye TryhornPublished 20th Nov 2024

Wiltshire households will have an extra recycling bin or reusable sack to put out from 2027.

The Council's waste department has been looking into ways to allow residents to recycle as much of their rubbish as possible.

They're suggesting that from April 2027, we would use our existing blue lidded bin for mixed plastics, cans, cartons and for the first time flexible plastics.

But we would then have either a second wheelie bin, or a reusable sack for paper and cardboard, as well as the current black box for glass items.

The Council's also looking to add food waste recycling at the same time.

Cabinet's now confirmed that the change will be going ahead. Tuesday (19th November).

It's claimed the changes would result in a reduction in annual revenue expenditure - compared with adding separate weekly collections of food waste and including flexible plastics to the current service.

There'd also be increased income from commodity sales, an improved recycling rate, simplification of the recycling sorting process and a significant reduction in carbon emissions.

Cllr Dominic Muns, Cabinet Member for Waste, said:

“I am pleased that we now have a preferred option on our future recycling collections, and this means we can now start the process to secure a provider to deliver these services from 2027.

“Any potential change that affects all households in the county cannot be done lightly and that’s why we’ve carried out an extensive level of due diligence to ensure the decision we make is the right one.

“Our focus is ensuring residents have the very best opportunities to recycle as much as possible from the kerbside, that we meet all our obligations as set out in the Environment Act and that these services are financially sustainable.

“Together with all other local authorities, we are awaiting further clarification on certain aspects of the Environment Act and when that comes through that too may impact our plans.

“It’s important to note that the decision we’ve made is just the first step, and that residents will not see any changes to their collections for a few years. We’ll keep people updated as this process continues”.

In the last financial year (2023/24), the council recycled, reused or composted 43.7% of Wiltshire’s household waste, that is nearly a 4% increase from the previous financial year (40%).

They've also been encouraging people to ensure they are recycling as much as possible and putting the correct items in the right bins.

When the campaign began, over 5,000 bins were rejected for collection during March 2023, compared to just over 1,000 bins being rejected in March 2024.

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