UK recycling policy aims to improve recycling methods and levels across the UK, focusing on glass, paper, plastic and metal cans.
Glass Glass can be recycled in the form of bottles and jars which are crushed down and then melted. Glass can be recycled infinitely because it does not lose any of its quality. It uses a lot less energy, fewer raw materials and produces less than manufacturing glass from scratch. The main difficulty with
recycling glass is the need to remove the unwanted materials that contaminate it and avoiding the mixing of different colours. Glass collection points, known as
Bottle Banks are very common near
shopping centres, at
civic amenity sites and in local neighbourhoods in the
United Kingdom. Bottle Banks commonly stand beside collection points for other recyclable waste like
paper,
metals and
plastics. Local, municipal
waste collectors usually have one central point for all types of waste in which large glass containers are located. There are now over 50,000 bottle banks in the United Kingdom, and 752,000 tons of glass are now recycled annually.
Paper All types of waste paper are recyclable, and
recycled paper requires a lot less energy and fewer raw materials to produce than manufacturing it from scratch. However, paper cannot be recycled indefinitely, and the normal number of times it can be recycled is about six. 12.5 million tonnes of paper and cardboard are used annually in England.
Plastic In the UK, the amount of post-consumer plastic being recycled is relatively low, due in part to a lack of recycling facilities. The challenge with
recycling plastic lies in sorting differing
types of plastic, often by hand, which slows the process. The Plastics 2020 Challenge was founded in 2009 by the
plastics industry with the aim of engaging the British public in a nationwide debate about the use, reuse and disposal of plastics, and hosts a series of debates on its website framed around the waste hierarchy. Since 2024, caps have been tethered (attached) to plastic bottles due to a change with EU law and to reduce plastic waste. Although the UK was already a non-EU member at the time, many manufactures have nevertheless shipped goods to the UK with tethered caps for consistency.
Metal cans There is a high recycling rate for metal cans in the UK, with
aluminium recycling and steel cans being the most common items. Metal can be recycled indefinitely, and aluminium cans use just 5% of the energy needed to produce them from scratch and only release 5% of the amount of greenhouse gases. In addition, it is the easiest material to extract and separate from the other recyclables, using magnets for steel cans and special magnets (eddy currents) it guarantees recycling of every can.
Other materials Cartons In 2013, the Alliance for Beverage Cartons and the Environment and
Sonoco Alcore opened the UK's first carton recycling facility in
Halifax. Prior to this, recycling was limited because of the high shipping costs for export, but the new plant processes 40 per cent of the country's carton waste. Problems also arise because cartons cannot use recycled fibre, so they are converted into cardboard instead.
Electronics The
European Union implemented the
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment Directive (WEEE Directive, 2002/96/EC) in February 2003. It requires manufacturers to shoulder the burden of recycling by reimbursing the recyclers' costs. It also set a minimum quota of 4 kg per capita of
e-waste per head by 2009. The United Kingdom was the final member state to pass it into law. The success of the WEEE directive has varied significantly from state to state, with collection rates varying between 13 kilograms per capita per annum to as little as 1 kg per capita per annum. Computers & electronic wastes collected from households within Europe are treated under the WEEE directive via Producer Compliance Schemes (whereby manufacturers of Electronics pay into a scheme that funds its recovery from
household waste recycling centres (HWRCs)) and nominated Waste Treatment Facilities (known as Obligated WEEE). However, recycling of ex corporate Computer Hardware and associated electronic equipment falls outside the Producer Compliance Scheme (Known as non-obligated). In the UK, Waste or obsolete corporate related computer hardware is treated via third party Authorized Treatment Facilities, who normally impose a charge for its collection and treatment. == Local councils and recycling ==