Develop UK-Wide Deposit Return Scheme
Conservative · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Conservative’s policy “Develop UK-Wide Deposit Return Scheme” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Clean environment & nature — Helps
minor · moderate confidence
A Deposit Return Scheme would likely reduce drinks-container litter and increase recycling rates, with strong evidence from comparable countries. The net climate benefit is smaller and more uncertain, and the policy as stated is still in a development phase with no firm launch date committed.
The evidence
- The policy commits to continuing to develop a UK-wide DRS while minimising impacts on businesses and consumers, but does not set a launch date or statutory target. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “continue to develop a UK-wide Deposit Return Scheme, while working to minimise its impact on businesses and consumers”
- The scheme targets a container return rate of at least 90% within three years of launch, up from current recycling rates estimated at 70-75% for these materials. — compact-and-bale.com (media) — “achieve a container return rate of at least 90% within three years of launch, a significant increase from current recycling rates estimated at 70-75% for these materials”
- Countries with established DRS programmes often exceed 90% return rates, with Germany achieving 98%. — vyprclients.com (media) — “Countries with well-established DRS programmes often exceed 90% return rates, with Germany achieving 98%”
- Drinks-related litter is a significant environmental problem, with an estimated 6.5 billion single-use bottles and cans going to waste each year in the UK. — compact-and-bale.com (media) — “an estimated 6.5 billion single-use bottles and cans going to waste each year in the UK”
- 97% of UK beach cleans found drinks-related litter, indicating the scale of the litter problem DRS addresses. — compact-and-bale.com (media) — “Surveys indicate 97% of UK beach cleans found drinks-related litter”
- Increased recycling through DRS is expected to reduce landfill volumes, cutting methane emissions and saving energy by reusing materials. — thefirstmile.co.uk (media) — “Increased recycling will lead to lower volumes of waste sent to landfill, reducing methane emissions and pollution, and saving energy and carbon by reusing materials”
- The government projects annual benefits of £1.612 billion from reduced litter clearing costs, greenhouse gas savings, and the commercial value of recycled materials. — compact-and-bale.com (media) — “The government projects annual benefits of £1.612 billion, driven by reduced litter clearing costs, greenhouse gas savings, and the commercial value of recycled materials”
- The WSTA (an industry advocacy body) questions the CO2 emission reduction claims, suggesting increased consumer and waste collector travel could negate some benefits. — wsta.co.uk (media) — “the Wine and Spirit Trade Association (WSTA) questions the CO2 emission reduction claims, suggesting increased consumer and waste collector travel could negate some benefits”
- The IEA (an advocacy body) argues that given existing kerbside collection, DRS might be a disproportionately costly intervention. — iea.org.uk (media) — “given existing kerbside collection, the DRS might be a disproportionately costly intervention”
- DRS is expected to yield cleaner, higher-quality recycled materials, supporting closed-loop production. — thefirstmile.co.uk (media) — “Collecting containers separately through a DRS is expected to yield cleaner, higher-quality recycled materials, supporting closed-loop production”
Biggest unknown: Whether the scheme launches on a firm timetable and achieves the targeted 90% return rate, or remains delayed — and whether increased collection-related travel offsets some of the emissions savings.
Our reading: The environmental case for DRS rests on three pillars: (1) dramatically higher container return rates — international evidence (Germany at 98%) confirms that well-run schemes routinely hit or exceed the 90% target; (2) direct litter reduction — the scale of drinks-container litter in the UK is substantial, and DRS creates a direct financial incentive to return containers rather than discard them; (3) improved material quality and reduced landfill methane emissions from separating containers from mixed waste streams. The main counter-arguments come from industry advocacy sources (WSTA, IEA), which must be flagged and down-weighted accordingly. The WSTA's concern about increased travel partially offsetting CO2 savings is a plausible but unquantified risk; the IEA's 'disproportionate cost' argument is about economic efficiency, not environmental outcome. Neither negates the directional environmental improvement, though they temper confidence in the magnitude of net climate benefit. The limiting factor on magnitude is the policy's framing: 'continue to develop' implies a pre-launch development phase with no committed start date or statutory target. Real-world environmental benefit only flows once the scheme is operational and achieving high return rates. Until launch, the near-term environmental effect is negligible; the long-term effect — if the scheme runs as designed — is a genuine, modest improvement in recycling, litter, and landfill emissions. Absent this policy, the status quo 70-75% recycling rate for these containers and high litter levels persist, so the additional gain is real. Magnitude is assessed as minor rather than moderate because DRS addresses a specific waste stream, not the broader emissions or biodiversity picture central to O6.