MPs Called On To Back Rubbish Bill

Large shops could be forced to accept packaging returned by customers

Related Links

What Price Sustainable Waste Disposal?

Residents Recycle Enough Cardboard to Fill Olympic Sized Swimming Pool

Junk Mail Costs More than the Paper it's Written on

Hounslow Helps Green fingered Gardeners to Get Going This Spring

Matt James Searches For An Eco Eden

Crackdown on Untidy Residents and Unscrupulous Traders

Make a Green Resolution for 2007

Chiswick Recycling Action Group

Hounslow Liberal Democrats have called on local MPs Alan and Ann Keen to back a Bill presented by Liberal Democrat Shadow Local Government Secretary Andrew Stunell MP to require all large shops to accept packing returned by customers.

Packaging typically costs a family £470 each year, one sixth of their food budgets, according to the Government’s own Waste Resources Action Programme.

Cllr Andrew Dakers, Leader of Hounslow Liberal Democrats, said, “It is worrying that over half the household waste produced by homes in Hounslow every year is from packaging. It costs families the equivalent of two months’ grocery bills just to pay for throw away wrapping and packaging.

“Local Liberal Democrats are backing this Bill that will make large stores like Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda accept packaging returned by customers.

“The aim is to get retailers to put pressure on suppliers to cut packaging with the result of less waste.

“This is good for the environment, good for council costs and good for waste disposal.”

Commenting after presenting the Retail Packaging Recycling Bill to Parliament, Andrew Stunell MP, said, “Commercial wrapping and packaging is very difficult to recycle, particularly at the household level, where quantities are quite small and very diverse.

“My Bill puts the responsibility back on the retailer. They will soon find out just how difficult much of it is to recycle because of different materials being bonded together.

“Similar laws in Ireland, Germany and Switzerland quickly resulted in retailers putting pressure on suppliers and manufacturers to cut down on packaging, saving both money and land-fill.”


March 20, 2007