|

Average household paying
£30 a year in landfill tax
Councils will pay central government £1.8bn in
landfill tax over the three years up to 2011, equating to £30 of the average
household's annual council tax bill, according to new figures from the Local
Government Association (LGA).
The LGA is now calling on the government to
return the landfill tax revenue to councils to allow them to invest in
additional waste-reduction initiatives and increased recycling capacity.
Paul Bettison, chairman of the LGA's environment
board, said the association was lobbying the Treasury to ring-fence the money
so that it is spent only on recycling and waste-reduction efforts as part of
next month's budget.
"What we have at the moment is a tax within a
tax," he said. "We want to see that money come back to the councils, if
necessary ring-fenced so then money can only go on recycling machines and
anaerobic digestors."
Revenue from landfill tax was previously
ring-fenced for spending on waste-reduction initiatives, but the government
scrapped that condition last year, prompting criticism from many business groups
which accused the government of reneging on its commitment to ensure the tax was
only used to fund environmental initiatives.
Bettison said councils wanted to stop sending
waste to landfill, but were often forced to by an absence of appropriate
recycling facilities.
"There are lots of councils that would love to
stop sending food waste to landfill altogether," he said. "They know it produces
greenhouse gas in the form of methane and they know anaerobic digestion systems
work, but they also know these types of technologies are expensive and they are
not in a position to find the money."
Bettison's comments follow a National Audit Office
report earlier this year, which warned that a shortfall in UK recycling and
waste-to-energy capacity could result in recyclable waste being sent to
landfill. It concluded that a lack of investment in domestic recycling capacity
meant the UK was at risk of missing an EU target to halve the amount of
biodegradable municipal waste being sent to landfill by 2013.
A spokesman for the LGA said council recycling
budgets were likely to face further pressure from April when landfill taxes
increase by £8 to £40 a tonne under the government's landfill tax accelerator.
The government maintains that the accelerator
provides councils with an incentive to invest in expanding recycling capacity,
but privately some councilors believe that despite the threat of unlimited
fines from EU if it fails to meet landfill targets, the Treasury is reluctant to
support measures that would lead to a reduction in the landfill tax revenues.
A spokesman for the Treasury said the chancellor
was aware of the calls for the tax to be ring-fenced, but refused to be drawn on
whether or not any changes to the tax would be included in next month's budget.
"Government engages with industry on a regular basis, particularly in the
build-up to the budget," he said. "The chancellor is aware of this issue, but
tax is an issue for the budget."
Source:
www.businessgreen.com
For more information, please contact GPT Waste Management on 01928 571 349

|