§ Mr. SheermanTo ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs which 10 local authorities in England achieved the(a) highest and (b) lowest rates for household recycling in 2002–03. [162049]
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§ Mr. MorleyThe percentage of household waste recycled and composted by the 10 highest and lowest performing local authorities in England, for which the most recent data available are 2002–03, is presented in the following table:
Local authority Percentage of household waste recycled and composted in 2002–031 Daventry district council 44 Lichfield district council 43 Wyre district council 33 Melton district council 31 Isle of Wight district council 31 St. Edmundsbury district council 30 Windsor and Maidenhead borough council 29 Forest Heath district council 28 Eastleigh 28 Chiltern district council2 27 Dorset county council2 27 Kettering district council 4 North Tyneside council 4 Rochdale metropolitan borough council 4 Corby district council 4 Tower Hamlets London borough 3 Bolsover district council 3 Hackney London borough 3 Sunderland city council 2 Barking and Dagenham London borough 2 Liverpool Metropolitan borough council 2 1 These data are published by ODPM and are available at www.bvni.gov.uk. The level of household waste recycling in local authorities is the sum of Best value Performance Indicator 82a and 82b (percentage of household waste sent for recycling and composting respectively). 2 Joint tenth place.
§ Mr. SheermanTo ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what level of household recycling was achieved in each London borough in the latest year for which figures are available. [162050]
§ Mr. MorleyThe percentage of household waste recycled and composted by each London borough, for which the most recent data available are 2002–03, is presented in the table.
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Local authority Percentage of household waste recycled and composted in 2002–031 City of London 14.5 Camden 16.1 Greenwich 9.4 Hackney 2.6 Hammersmith and Fulham 8.5 Islington 5.8 Kensington and Chelsea 7.9 Lambeth 11.0 Lewisham 7.3 Southwark 4.6 Tower Hamlets 3.4 Wandsworth 10.5 Westminster 11.5 Barking and Dagenham 2.2 Barnet 12.1 Bexley 22.0 Brent 6.6
Local authority Percentage of household waste recycled and composted in 2002–031 Bromley 15.4 Croydon 13.1 Baling 10.7 Enfield 11.7 Haringey 4.4 Harrow 9.4 Havering 6.7 Hillingdon 19.5 Hounslow 15.1 Kingston-upon-Thames 19.0 Merton 15.0 Newham 4.2 Redbridge 10.0 Richmond-Upon-Thames 20.5 Sutton 19.3 Waltham Forest 10.2 1 These data are published by ODPM and are available at www.bvpi.gov.uk. The level of household waste recycling in local authorities equates to the addition of BV82a (sent for recycling) and BV82a (sent for composting).
§ Mr. SheermanTo ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what penalties are imposed on local authorities who fail to meet recycling targets. [162051]
§ Mr. MorleyThe Secretary of State has powers under section 15 of the Local Government Act 1999 to act where authorities are failing to deliver best value. She may consider using these powers to require an authority to make the necessary arrangements to ensure that Statutory Performance Standards for recycling and composting are met.
The starting point would be to invite the authority to submit an action plan setting out how it proposed to meet the standard by a given deadline. If the plan were considered unsatisfactory, follow-up action could range from inviting consultants to provide advice to the authority, to the Secretary of State taking over the waste management duties of the authority until such time as sufficient improvement is secured and can be sustainably maintained by the authority. Any of these steps is likely to have financial consequences for the authority.
We have, however, made clear that we will only use intervention powers as a last resort, and have established a Local Authority Support Unit in Defra's Waste Implementation Programme to assist local authorities in meeting their targets.
§ Mr. Jim CunninghamTo ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what action her Department is taking to ensure that local authorities have sufficient funds to promote home-based waste separation for recycling. [163153]
§ Mr. Morley[holding answer 23 March 2004]: Local authority waste management services are funded through the Environmental, Protective and Cultural Services (EPCS) block. Spending Review 2002 increased provision by £671 million over the three years to 2005–06 and we will again be considering the quantum of funding as part of Spending Review 2004. In addition, on 6 January I announced that Defra will be 1208W distributing a share of a £20 million grant to all local authorities in England to address the pressure each faces to invest in waste management services in 2004–05.
Within Defra we have also established the Waste Implementation Programme (WIP), investing in strategic measures to help authorities to divert waste from landfill. Through the Waste Minimisation and Recycling ('Challenge') Fund, WIP provides funds for local authorities to implement projects that improve recycling infrastructure in their area. Many of these projects improve the design and coverage of kerbside recycling schemes, including household separation. In 2003–04 the Challenge Fund has distributed £62.5 million to 14 big-ticket 'partnership' projects, and £43.3 million to 51 smaller projects.
WIP has made £30 million available to the Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP) for communications and awareness work directly focused on increasing participation in recycling and waste minimisation initiatives. A significant proportion has been allocated to a new fund, targeted at communications projects delivered at local level, primarily by local authorities, including:
£1.7 million recently allocated to support the continuation or expansion of existing local communications schemes;£8.5 million to communications programmes directly supporting new recycling infrastructure funded by WIP under the Challenge fund;£8.5 million to fund other communications activity delivered at local or regional level through WRAP'S Performance Improvement Through Communications Initiative.WRAP also operate a free advisory service available to local authorities that need to implement and improve kerbside collection systems.
§ Mr. Jim CunninghamTo ask the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs what action her Department is taking to ensure that local authorities meet their objectives for home based waste separation for recycling within the EU timeframe.[163154]
§ Mr. Morley[holding answer 23 March 2004]: There are no obligations for local authorities to implement home based waste separation under EU law.
In England, the Household Waste Recycling Act requires that waste collection authorities, except in certain circumstances, collect at least two types of recyclable material separate from the residual waste by December 2010.
In addition, local authorities in England have statutory targets in place to ensure that the national targets for increasing the recycling or composting rate to 25 per cent. by 2005, 30 per cent. by 2010 and 33 per cent. by 2015, are met. The Government-funded Waste Resources Action Programme is establishing a programme of advice and training for local authorities to improve collection systems for recyclable materials and organic wastes.