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Welsh government to press ahead with Deposit Return Scheme plans

Welsh government to press ahead with Deposit Return Scheme plans
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The Welsh government have announced that they will attempt to get their deposit return scheme ready for launch in time for October 2027 when the rest of the UK goes live.

The Association of Convenience Stores, who represent the UK’s 50,000 local shops, has criticised the inclusion of glass containers on the Welsh scheme on a “reuse” basis where bottles are returned to be refilled rather than recycled.


The rest of the UK is set to introduce a deposit return scheme for plastic, aluminium and steel drinks containers in October 2027, and has appointed UK Deposit Management Organisation Ltd (UKDMO) to make the scheme work.

Figures from British Glass show that glass is already one of the most recycled forms of packaging in the UK, with around three quarters of all glass being recycled.

The Welsh government’s decision to include glass not only creates friction in UK-wide supply chains by apparently requiring drinks sold in glass to be produced in Welsh and non-Welsh versions, but will introduce operational differences for Welsh retailers who would have to collect glass bottles separately and keep them whole for collection and re-filling.

Last month, the Welsh Government rejected the UK Deposit Management Organisation’s (DMO) offer to align with the wider UK scheme, which included a separate trial reuse scheme in Wales, and decided to push ahead with its own scheme despite the original justification for not being part of a UK-wide scheme being that they wanted to focus on reuse.

Association of Convenience Stores chief executive James Lowman said, “We have learned over the last decade of talks and trials on the introduction of a deposit return scheme that the operation of the scheme is complex.

"This becomes exponentially more challenging when there are fundamentally different approaches in different parts of the UK.

"Today we have seen welcome alignment around the treatment of all materials except glass, but the inclusion of glass in Wales and of an entirely different model to that being used elsewhere in the UK will promote a host of questions about how retailers will collect glass bottles, with no answers available yet.

“ACS and our members are fully committed to making a DRS scheme work despite significant operational challenges. This unnecessary operational complexity and uncertainty leaves businesses running and supplying shops in Wales confused and frustrated.”

ACS and a host of industry groups are continuing to urge the Welsh Government to align the details of its scheme with the rest of the UK, and to consider trialing glass reuse schemes alongside a consistent UK-wide scheme instead of regulating for the introduction of a parallel scheme.