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Biffa steps up plastic recycling plan despite fall in profits

Ban on waste being shipped to South East Asia hits profits at waste management giant

A recycling bay at BIFFA recycling plant in Beaumont Leys in Leicestershire (Image: PA)

A ban on plastic recycling being shipped to South East Asian countries has hit waste management firm Biffa, the company has revealed.

However, bosses at the Buckinghamshire-based company, which is the biggest collector of commercial waste in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, said it has weathered the storm and will spend £27.5 million to allow more plastic recycling to take place closer to home, at its Seaham, County Durham, recycling plant.

The announcement came as Biffa said pre-tax profits for the year to March 29 fell 44% to £21.5 million, with revenues up 3.3% to £1.1 billion.

Chief executive Michael Topham said the company "successfully weathered the headwinds associated with the Chinese import restrictions on commodities".

He added that household bin collections in its municipal division also dragged down overall profits, due to old loss-making contracts with some of the 31 local authorities it works with.

"Both of these areas, which have put downward pressure on our financial performance, have now stabilised."

Staff at the Biffa waste processing centre in Aldridge, West Midlands, where bulk paper is sorted and recycled(Image: BPM)

The municipal division performed particularly badly, with revenues down 4% to £164.6 million and underlying pre-tax profits down 32.2% to £16.6 million.

By comparison, the industrial and commercial division saw revenues jump 8% to £608.3 million, with underlying pre-tax profits up 13.2% to £87.4 million.