Decluttering reaches record high during Covid

Covid and travel restrictions have not deterred, but helped Galwegians, to declutter their homes.

A surge in lockdown spring cleaning saw 2,881 tonnes of electrical waste collected in Galway by the country’s largest recycling scheme in 2020.

Some 11.1kg of e-waste was recycled per person in the county last year – exceeding both the 2019 collection rate of 10.9kg, and the 2020 national average of 10.9kg per person.

However, WEEE Ireland has warned that the rise in reusing and repairing of electrical goods must be counted towards Ireland’s recycling targets if we are serious about developing a circular economy.

WEEE Ireland was one of the best performing recycling schemes in Europe in 2020, with 38,724 tonnes of waste electrical items collected in total – including 120,000 fridges and 200,000 TVs and monitors recovered. And the equivalent of some 46 million used AA portable batteries were also prevented from ending up in landfill, according to it annual report.

WEEE Ireland accounts for two-thirds of all national waste electrical and electronics collection activity on behalf of 1,189 producer members.

The scheme achieved the biggest monthly volume in its 16-year history in July when the first lockdown was lifted with a record 3,763 tonnes of electrical waste collected for recycling countrywide.

However, with electrical consumption rising on a yearly basis, its CEO is calling on legislators to recognise the role that unreported activities such as repair are increasingly playing alongside recycling in the circular economy.

“In Galway, and across Ireland, we are consuming more electrical goods than ever – with the annual tonnage on the market rising from 15kg a head in 2016 to 21kg a head last year,” says WEEE Ireland CEO Leo Donovan.

"This rise makes meeting the annual EU WEEE directive target even harder, despite achieving record recycling levels, as it equates to the percentage of goods sold.

“WEEE Ireland has been a huge educator in the areas of reuse and repair, alongside the electrical producers, partnering with new initiatives like Repair My Stuff.ie and My Waste.ie

“It is time to realistically measure the amount of goods that are kept in circulation, rather than basing targets solely on end-of-life recycling, and also legislate for longer-life technologies such as photovoltaic panels and EV batteries.

“We have to recognise that significant volumes of WEEE are not being handed over to the schemes, but going to export, metal scrap and other flows.”

Almost 19 million pieces of e-waste were recovered in 2020.

Spring cleaning during lockdown saw significant rises in the amount of easily hoarded small electrical appliances (22 per cent ) and small IT equipment (13per cent ) recycled by households.

In 2020, the equivalent of 225,182 tonnes of CO2 emissions were avoided by recycling e-waste through the WEEE Ireland Scheme as opposed to landfilling. That is the equivalent of the annual carbon consumption of 4,504 hectares of trees.

The country’s largest electrical and battery recycling scheme also exceeded the EU’s 45 per cent target for waste portable batteries in 2020 by two per cent – with 932 tonnes collected, a five per cent increase on 2019.

“Retail collections were higher than previous years despite the challenges of lockdown, including store opening restrictions and the absence of home installations which will always see old machines collected for recycling,” says Donovan.

Some 56 per cent of electrical waste was collected from retailer sites – up 310 tonnes on the previous year, and the sixth year of increases.

Collection volumes from local authority sites significantly increased by more than 1,000 tonnes to 11,736 tonnes in 2020 – 30 per cent of the total volume collected.

“Despite people not being able to travel distances to their local centre for a significant part of 2020 and WEEEE Ireland only able to hold eight public events compared to 50 the previous year, we still succeeded in breaking previous records,” he says.

"Some 84 per cent of all material we collect is recovered for use again in manufacturing through both indigenous operators and specialist processors in Europe, meaning our recycling efforts have a significant impact on the environment.”

 

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