Episode 87: The Waste Journey of WEEE (Waste, Electrical & Electronic Equipment)

04/12/2025 38 min

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Episode Synopsis

News RoundupFines for Littering From Cars Up Nearly 500% Since 2020Jane and Alasdair welcome the dramatic rise in fines but note the bigger picture: only five fines a day across the UK — a tiny response compared to the mountains of roadside litter.England to Ban Controversial Pay-Per-Fine Litter SystemThe government plans to scrap enforcement schemes where private companies profit from issuing fines. Alasdair is unmoved: the simplest way to avoid a fine remains don’t litter in the first place.Spring 2027 Confirmed as Start Date for Ban on Plastic in Wet WipesAfter years of fatbergs, blockages and microplastic pollution, England will finally ban wet wipes containing plastic. Scotland and Northern Ireland are working toward similar bans — albeit slowly.Scottish Council Considers Cap After One Resident Books Nearly 250 HWRC VisitsListeners overwhelmingly agreed: 250 visits is not household use — it’s commercial activity in disguise. With ANPR tech now widely used, enforcing limits should be straightforward.Illegal Waste Dumping Investigation Leads to ArrestFollowing months of inaction, an arrest has finally been made relating to a major illegal dumping site first raised in July. The delay highlights many of the enforcement weaknesses discussed last week with barrister Samantha Riggs (Episode 86).Major Waste Firm Warns Vapes Cause Over One Fire Per DayDespite the ban on disposables, fires linked to lithium batteries inside vapes continue to rise. Jane and Alasdair stress that this isn’t a “vape problem” alone — any hidden battery in any electronic item poses a risk.Topic: The Waste Journey of WEEEThe UK places around 1.65 million tonnes of electrical goods on the market each year, yet almost half of all WEEE never reaches recycling — instead being hoarded, binned, lost, or illegally exported. Jane highlights Material Focus research showing that hundreds of thousands of tonnes of reusable or recyclable electronics sit forgotten in cupboards and drawers.Under WEEE regulations, any product with a plug, cable or battery counts as electrical waste. Producers must register, report tonnages, and pay for recycling — usually via a compliance scheme. But as Alasdair notes, the regulations were written in 2007 and haven’t kept pace with today’s battery-powered gadgets, smart devices and embedded electronics. Even novelty Christmas antlers with light-up LEDs technically fall under WEEE, yet most people throw them in the bin.The episode also walks through practical recycling steps: retailers must offer take-back when selling new items, HWRCs accept everything from kettles to TVs, and tools like Material Focus’ Hypnocat search tool help householders find drop-off points. Alasdair tested it himself while trying to recycle his broken kettle — and found it far more reliable than Amazon’s own guidance.At authorised treatment facilities, items are dismantled, hazards removed, batteries extracted, and materials shredded and separated. But many products — from toys to laptops — make battery removal so difficult that operators resort to hammers. This design-for-disposal failure is a major barrier to safe recycling.Alasdair and Jane conclude that while the system is workable, it’s outdated. Without better producer responsibility, improved design standards, and stronger communication to the public, WEEE recycling will remain a bottleneck in the UK’s circular economy.Rubbish Rant: Producers, Wet Wipes, and Christmas TatThis week’s rant is firmly aimed at producers — especially those flooding the market with disposable tech, plastic-filled wet wipes, and seasonal “electrical tat” guaranteed to break before New Year. Alasdair calls for manufacturers to take real responsibility for end-of-life environmental impacts, and Jane notes the ongoing confusion caused when neither producers nor retailers explain proper disposal routes.