Cllr Andy Moore - Recycle Week

Forest of Dean residents invited to take part in the Big Recycling Hunt

Residents in the Forest of Dean are being asked to keep their eyes peeled and hunt out hidden recycling to celebrate this year’s national Recycle Week campaign and boost recycling rates across the district.

Kicking off next week (16-22 October) the ‘Big Recycling Hunt’ calls on the public to take action to prevent items ending up in UK rubbish bins when they could have been recycled. 

Councillor Andy Moore, portfolio holder for waste and recycling at Forest of Dean District Council, said: “This year’s Recycle Week is all about maximising the amount we recycle by seeking out those items that sometimes get overlooked. While most of us regularly recycle items like tins, cans and glass jars, less familiar items such as empty aerosols and aluminium foil can be forgotten. 

“Thanks to the brilliant efforts of our residents, the Forest of Dean district is in the top 12 per cent of local councils in terms of recycling and waste performance but to help boost recycling rates further and capture even more materials we’re asking for the public’s help to look for more opportunities to recycle, whether that’s by searching different rooms around the home, through checking school lunch boxes at the end of the day or sorting through bathroom bins. With on-street recycling bins for drinks cans and plastic bottles in each of the four Forest towns, there’s even the opportunity to recycle while out and about.

“If everyone in the district found one extra item each week for recycling that would result in a staggering 4.5 million items extra being saved from going to waste, helping to ensure more materials go back into the system and made into new products and packaging, lessening the impact on our planet and reducing emissions that damage our climate.”

Research by Waste and Resources Action Programme, the organisation behind Recycle Week, suggests that as well as foil and aerosols, some of the most common items that go unrecycled nationally include plastic detergent/cleaning bottles and plastic toiletry/shampoo bottles, with glass perfume and aftershave bottles topping the list. The District Council points out that all of these can be recycled as part of the kerbside service offered to residents but asks that triggers are removed before recycling spray bottles.

Residents can find a quick guide to what can be recycled at the kerbside on the back of their annual waste collection calendar with more detailed information available on the Forest of Dean District Council’s webpages: https://www.fdean.gov.uk/bins-and-recycling/what-to-put-in-your-bin/

The Gloucestershire Waste Wizard online tool can help householders find the right way to recycle their unwanted items, including those items not currently accepted at the kerbside, as well as their nearest recycling drop off points. Find the Waste Wizard: https://www.fdean.gov.uk/wastewizard

Contact Information

Forest of Dean Communications Team

[email protected]

Notes to editors

Photo shows: Councillor Andy Moore, Portfolio Holder for Waste and Recycling, Forest of Dean District Council.

  • According to the Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), 29% of UK people recycle most things but not everything, 9% recycle key items only or recycle occasionally, while 3% of people rarely or never recycle.