Consumers could end up footing part of the bill so local authorities can
upgrade amenity sites to cope with waste electrical and electronic equipment.
This warning from the Local Government
Association (LGA) comes as local councils get ready to comply with the
Waste
Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) directive which comes into force
on 1 July.
The UK is already two years behind in complying with this environmental
directive aimed at reducing the amount of waste electrical goods going to
landfill.
The law forces producers of such equipment to recycle or dispose of it in an
environmentally responsible way. However, the cost of disposal should not be
passed on to consumers.
In order for this to happen, retailers either have to pick up the goods free
of charge or sign up to the
Distributor
Takeback Scheme (DTS). Retailers who have joined this compliance scheme have
paid into a pot to fund adaptations to council recycling centres to prepare for
the extra volume of waste.
This involves a one-off payment to councils of around £6,500 per site,
although some councils may be given an additional payment of up to £2,500. But
to get the extra funding, they have to make a case to the
Department of
Trade and Industry (DTI).
Councils are concerned that the pot is not big enough and are also worried
that no provisions have been made to pay for the annual operational costs of
running larger sites, estimated at around £9m every year.
"The one-off payments, even if a council can make a case for the additional
payment does not cater for future expansion and the growing mountain of WEEE in
the future," a representative for the LGA told Computeractive.
HP which is both a producer and retailer has paid into the DTS. It said the
funds should be sufficient to cover upgrades to civil amenity sites both now and
in the future a representative said it and other retailers would always work
with local councils and government to ensure future WEEE waste could be dealt
with.
However, currently more than a million tonnes of electrical items will have
to be collected every year - the weight of around 2,500 jumbo jets. Of this, an
estimated five million TVs, two million home computers and 8,000 tonnes of
battery-operated or electrical toys are thrown away each year.
This tonnage is expected to grow and if the funds are not there to help
councils upgrade, the LGA said the result could be councils refusing to take
waste electrical goods or shifting part of the burden onto the public by having
to raise council tax.
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