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Insider UK
Environment
Craig Paton & Peter A Walker

Deposit return deadline looms as scheme faces uncertainty

The deadline for the removal of UK Government conditions on Scotland’s Deposit Return Scheme (DRS) is due to expire today, with it potentially being scrapped if ministers do not back down.

Scotland’s First Minister set the timeline in a letter to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak on Saturday, saying a failure to revoke the conditions would put the scheme in “grave danger”.

Last week, UK ministers approved a partial exemption to the Internal Market Act for the deposit scheme, but stipulated glass cannot be involved north of the border.

Speaking to the PA news agency on Saturday, Humza Yousaf said: “I struggle to see it going ahead, and therefore the UK Government have a real choice here.

“They either agree to the full exemption, which is of course the regulations passed by the Scottish Parliament, or they’re in danger of sinking this scheme in its entirety.”

The deadline was set to allow for the Scottish Cabinet to discuss a response on Tuesday during its regular weekly meeting and provide an update to Holyrood.

However, the chance of the conditions being revoked seemed unlikely on Sunday, when Scottish Secretary Alister Jack said the Prime Minister should not back down.

Asked if the UK Government should reverse course, Jack said: “No - we’ve given the exclusion - there are four conditions in that exclusion which allow the scheme to work across the United Kingdom.”

If it goes live as planned next March, the deposit return scheme would see a 20p charge placed on drinks containers which would be refunded to consumers upon their return in a bid to increase recycling levels.

Scottish Green Party environment spokesman Mark Ruskell told BBC Radio Scotland’s Good Morning Scotland programme: “I think we are at a point now where the scheme is on the brink, there does need to be negotiation now around the detail of the UK Government’s letter and its conditions that it’s put down.

“Some of these conditions are very very challenging. If the UK Government continues to require the exclusion of glass then clearly that will have an economic impact on the viability of the scheme, it will also have a very damaging impact on the environmental benefits of the scheme as well.”

Asked whether the scheme could go ahead just with plastic, he replied: “I don’t know at this point and clearly there has been a lot of analysis and discussions with industry about the viability of the scheme, I’ve yet to see what the numbers look like on that.

“The exclusion of glass is very very damaging towards the scheme, it is not what was agreed back in 2019 between the UK Government and all the nations of the UK, it’s not the flexibility that was agreed and I think quite frankly the involvement of the Secretary of State for Scotland has been deeply unhelpful.”

In a rare intervention, the scheme's administrator waded into the row, stating: “Circularity Scotland, our members and business and industry partners have invested around £300m to develop a deposit return scheme - and have done so at no cost to the taxpayer.

“We urge both governments to urgently get round the table and agree a pathway for integrated and harmonised deposit return schemes across the UK.

“Without this agreement, investment and public confidence will be seriously damaged, jeopardising credibility for investment in any future major environmental projects.”

Circularity Scotland employs 50 people, with their futures uncertain given the turmoil around the scheme, while businesses already signed up to the DRS - including some of the world’s biggest drinks companies like Heineken, Coca Cola and Diageo - employ upwards of two million.

The SNP’s deputy leader Keith Brown told Good Morning Scotland that the Scottish Government’s cabinet will make a decision on DRS when it meets on Tuesday.

“The implications for refusal will be considered, as I understand it, by the Scottish cabinet,“ he stated. “And they will have to take a decision as to what remains and the scheme, after it’s been sabotaged by the UK Government, can go ahead.”

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