Wales reopens DRS administrator search after sole bid rejected. The Welsh government has reopened applications for the deposit return scheme's Deposit Management Organisation after rejecting the sole bid from Exchange for Change, weeks before the Senedd dissolved for May's elections. The ACS warns the delay leaves little time for the October 2027 launch.
Exchange for Change, which is already running DRS administration in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, was the only applicant to oversee operational design and delivery of the Welsh scheme. Its bid was rejected weeks before the Senedd was dissolved ahead of the 7 May elections, meaning no administrator can be confirmed until after the next government takes office. The Welsh government has reopened the process, with the new application window closing on 2 June.
Wales' scheme differs from those elsewhere in the UK by including glass drink containers, adding complexity to scheme design and delivery. The ACS said the failure to make progress was "extremely concerning", particularly given that the Welsh scheme is more complex and costly than those coming into force in the rest of the UK.
Paul Sanderson will step down as chief executive of The Recycling Association in August to lead the UK Cleaning Products Industry Association, after three and a half years in the role. The trade body has opened recruitment for a successor, with applications closing on 24 April.
The Bureau of International Recycling, which represents the recycling industry across 72 countries, has rejected claims that the "sliding scale" methodology for classifying green steel encourages the use of recycled material, calling the approach misleading and scientifically unsound.
Exchange for Change, the deposit management organisation appointed to oversee DRS in England, Northern Ireland and Scotland, has applied to serve as scheme administrator for Wales's deposit return scheme. Wales's scheme differs from the rest of the UK by including glass drinks containers.
A Lancashire plastics company and its director have been fined a combined £142,114 for illegally exporting contaminated waste to Malaysia. 3R Technology UK Ltd, based in Preston, pleaded guilty to 16 offences at Preston Magistrates’ Court, including shipping waste misrepresented as clean plastic.