Deposits for beverage packaging on the rise: Scotland to start in 2023
Thomas Reiner
CEO at Berndt+Partner | 30+ Years of Leading in the Packaging industry | Shaping the Future of Packaging for Global Brands.
Anyone producing, importing, buying or selling beverages in Scotland will have to deal with a newly introduced deposit system from August 2023. By establishing deposits for beverage packaging, the country aims to reduce its waste by a significant amount and cut climate emissions by 160,000 tons of CO2eq. Deposits are trending. By 2030, all countries will be moving toward reusable or deposit systems. This is due to non-closed-loop systems, which are spurring activity among regulators. In addition, economic and social factors are coming to the fore – because waste is not only an environmental and climate problem, but also a major cost factor.
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The Scottish deposit scheme for beverage cans and bottles will apply from August 16, 2023, from which date all producers and importers of beverages in Scotland, regardless of size, will be responsible for collecting their packaging.
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The deposit system was developed with the involvement of Zero Waste Scotland.?The NGO had been commissioned by the government to identify design options and the associated costs, advantages and disadvantages, and to explore how the deposit system could best work in the country.
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Current situation and targets
Currently, Scotland recycles about half of the beverage containers distributed in the country. The new deposit system is expected to capture 90 percent of all cans and bottles in the system by 2025 – making billions of beverage containers available for recycling each year.
Climate protection: With the deposit system, the country wants to significantly reduce its waste and thus make an active contribution to climate protection. An average of 160,000 tons of CO2eq is expected to be saved, which corresponds to around 109,000 round-trip flights from Edinburgh to New York.
Cost factor: Financial factors also play a weighty argument in favor of introducing the deposit system. According to official figures, the wider impact of litter costs the Scottish economy and society £361 million (around €427 million) a year.
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The Scottish deposit system in detail
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Consequences for businesses
Who will be affected: the deposit scheme will result in new legal obligations relating to the sale, collection and recycling of beverage containers.
Responsibilities:
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Deposit on the rise worldwide
Deposit return systems already exist in at least 45 countries and territories around the world. By 2030, we will see approaches or already established returnable or deposit systems in all countries.
Deposit and reusable are not a fashion. It is a clear and strong trend that will remain as long as the cycles are not closed.
Until then, the pressure from regulators will also remain. Because it’s not just about climate and the environment – it’s also about the financial costs associated with waste.
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Good to see that regulators are moving!