The environmental charity
Green Alliance has published a report by the Circular Economy Task Force, in
which concern is expressed about UK
recycling falling behind other countries in the absence of immediate action
to secure material resources for reuse or recycling, a development that should
interest many business clients of Collect and Recycle (http://www.collectandrecycle.com).
The first report by the task
force, entitled ‘Resource resilient UK’, takes the government to task for
lacking an industrial strategy that takes resource risks sufficiently
‘seriously’ to ensure that a viable manufacturing economy is built, which would
drive future job creation and business opportunities.
The report flagged up how
the increasing costs of extraction, restricted land availability and
environmental issues like the scarcity of water were leading to shortages of
such materials as copper, aluminium and oil, suggesting that reuse and
recycling could be helpful in addressing these problems.
According to the report,
although UK businesses are interested in mitigating a scarcity of resources by
boosting the recycling of business
waste, there needed to be increased collaborative working between
businesses as well as more help from government.
This led the Task Force
report to propose a series of measures aimed at encouraging companies to secure
resources for a greater number of reuse and recycling approaches. Suggested
strategies included the government leading a study into the exposure of the UK
to material insecurity.
Also recommended in the
report was the strengthening of individual producer responsibility by
government, the European Commission clarifying competition law so that
exemptions are reinforced for co-ordination between businesses that benefits
the environment, and businesses committing to use long-term contracts and joint
ventures to accelerate material and product recovery.
It was also suggested that
government directly intervene in product design to ensure the greater ease of
reuse, recycling and remanufacture of products. In addition, support was set
out by the Task Force for such measures as minimum reuse and recycling targets,
reuse standards such as PAS 141 and the development of collection standards and
guidance to the end of maximum reusability – suggestions with which many waste disposal companies will
doubtless agree.
Report author Dustin Benton
commented: “Our
analysis shows that companies in the UK want and need to avoid resource
security risks. There’s a lot that businesses can do on their own, but the
government needs to help. The government’s industrial strategy should quantify
resource security risks for different business sectors. It also needs to
actively broker co-operation across supply chains to get materials back, and
push businesses to redesign their products to make them easier to recover.”
The Circular Economy Task Force was set up through
the UK’s Resource Security Action Plan with sponsorship from Defra and the
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS). It is composed of various
businesses and organisations, one of which is the Waste & Resources Action
Plan (WRAP). The report certainly makes interesting reading for any firm taking
advantage of waste services
like those of Collect and Recycle (http://www.collectandrecycle.com).
Editor’s
Note: Collect and Recycle (http://www.collectandrecycle.com) are represented by the search engine advertising and digital marketing
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