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New recycling record for the city

Steve Woodley, Matt Beddow-Jones and Tyrone Bartlett braving the winter downpour to collect recycling from Headley Way, Oxford Steve Woodley, Matt Beddow-Jones and Tyrone Bartlett braving the winter downpour to collect recycling from Headley Way, Oxford

OXFORD residents have set a new recycling record for the city.

Oxford’s recycling rate had remained at about 38 per cent for the past two years, but in October it rose to 47 per cent, the highest it has ever been.

The national average is 35 per cent.

A new weekly food waste collection and a single bin for other recyclables introduced in October had driven improvements, said city councillor John Tanner.

He added: “I am thrilled and want to say a big thank you to everyone in Oxford.

“People are really playing their part with the food waste and the blue wheelie bins. Now I want a Christmas present of a 50 per cent recycling rate.”

Steve Woodley, a recycling and waste operative at Oxford City Council, said: “We have definitely seen an increase in the amount of recycling since the blue bins were introduced.”

Yet there are fears that plans to charge £35 a year for green waste collections from April will hit efforts.

Liberal Democrat councillor Jean Fooks said charging for green waste collections could hit the recycling rate and called for two free green bag collections every year.

She said: “At least the rate is going up but it is still not great compared with surrounding districts.”

Elsewhere in the county, South Oxfordshire leads the way, recycling 70 per cent of its waste. Cherwell recycles 51 per cent and West Oxfordshire 34 per cent.

The Vale district’s recycling rate had been 36 per cent, but 83 per cent of waste was recycled during the first two weeks of its new system, which collects general and recyclable waste on alternate weeks.

West Oxfordshire also changed its system in November.

Alternative collections were introduced in Oxford in 2007, when the recycling rate was 19 per cent.

The blue bin takes glass, paper, cardboard, cans, plastics and Tetra-Pak containers.

cburatta@oxfordmail.co.uk

Comments(5)

nafnlaus says...
10:02am Mon 20 Dec 10

Do we have any choice in the matter?

Headington-Heathcliff says...
10:07am Mon 20 Dec 10

Well done, OCC, you've saved me several trips to recycle tetrapak cartons that you couldn't put in the old recycling boxes. Just to be sceptical now - how much from recycling bins has to be landfilled because nobody wants to buy it as a commercial material? I like filling my bin but I wonder what happens at the other end of the waste chain...

Dilligaf2010 says...
1:52pm Mon 20 Dec 10

Of course all this will change when Redbridge recycling centre closes to the public.....
Public 1 Council 0

Howard-3 says...
3:32pm Mon 20 Dec 10

£35 a year for green waste?

Oxford taxpayer says...
11:01am Tue 21 Dec 10

We know that fortnightly collections never produced the results that we were promised. Collecting green waste from all households and giving households the facilities to recycle, however, showed that residents were keen to recycle. Now we have the worst kind of mixed recycling where contamination rates can be as much as 30%, perhaps our council could publish the contamination rates for the recycling in the city? The majority of the mixed plastics will be shipped to the Far East where industrial plants are not strictly regulated and there have been cases where the plastics have been land-filled or incinerated rather than recycled, without any of the environmental controls that exist in the UK.

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