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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Huge South West-based recycling company to cut plastic waste export

The 2019 Viridor Recycling Index shows 85 per cent want º£½ÇÊÓÆµ plastic waste reprocessed at home

Phil Piddington and Sarah Heald

A recycling company which has its headquarters in Taunton has announced that all its recyclable plastic waste will be reprocessed in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ from next year.

It's part of Viridor's recycling investment programme which has successfully commissioned its new £65m plastics reprocessing plant at Avonmouth, near Bristol, in 2020.

It will be the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest multi-polymer facility which will create new raw materials, ready to be reused by packaging manufacturers in flake and pellet form from all its core recyclable materials collected in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Viridor managing director Phil Piddington said that, crucially, this demonstrated that plastic need not be considered a single use item, with reprocessing allowing it to be put back into the economy in a process which uses 50 per cent less energy than virgin plastic.

Sustainability charity WRAP identifies these core plastics as HDPE (plastic bottles, including milk bottles, shampoo bottles and other household items, such as cleaning products), PET (fizzy drink and water bottles) and PP (pots, tubs and trays).

Artist's impression of Avonmouth resource recovery centre

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Plastics Pact, of which Viridor was a founding member, has made the removal of unrecyclable plastics a key focus over the coming year. It says that as far as possible, by the end of this year, Pact members should remove polystyrene and PVC from food packaging and, by the end of 2020, they should be eradicated from non-food products.

Mr Piddington, who is also Chairman of the trade body the Environmental Services Association, said: “Viridor has been using the Recycling Index to track public attitudes to recycling for four years and, as a º£½ÇÊÓÆµ company working with 150 local authority and major corporate clients and 32,000 customers, we understand the appetite for greater resource efficiency and a more circular economy.

“What this really means is that people expect the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to be responsible for the waste it produces. The public want us to find a way to recycle and reprocess plastic so it is no longer considered single use, that it will go on to live another life and make an ongoing contribution to our economy.