Almost £500,000 will be awarded to community projects to tackle
the blight of littering, Environment Minister Thérèse Coffey
announced today.
The money will support the development of new innovation and
approaches for tackling litter, from behavioural research for
better positioned bins and recycling points so more people throw
their rubbish away, to digital technology. This includes apps and
‘smart-bins’ that can text alerts to rubbish collectors when they
are full, stopping nasty litter from spilling out onto our high
streets or leading people to litter nearby.
Cleaning up the country’s streets costs the tax payer almost
£800m a year when much of this is avoidable litter, and money
that could be better spent in the community.
Despite this a worrying one in five people have admitted to
dropping litter in the past. As we head into the bank holiday
weekend, with people out enjoying the warm weather, they are
reminded to throw their rubbish in bins or take their rubbish
home, rather than spoil our spaces with rubbish.
The Litter Innovation Fund will support local areas to crack down
and reduce littering in our communities by enabling local
authorities, community groups, charities, educational
institutions, and small and medium enterprises to apply for
funding towards innovative and creative solutions to the
problem.
Environment Minister Thérèse Coffey, said:
“Tackling the litter that blights streets across our country is
an important part of our drive to be the first generation to
leave our environment in a better state than we found it. I pay
tribute to those who help clear up our pavements and verges.
“The Litter Innovation Fund offers a great opportunity for the
most creative solutions to littering to receive funding and for
us all to learn new ways of how to stop littering happening. 10%
of the fund is entirely dedicated to preventing marine litter, a
growing problem with global consequences for our precious marine
environment.
“I encourage groups to get involved and showcase the wealth of
options there are out there to tackle littering. Let's help
people make the right choices.”
Communities Minister , said:
"The Litter Strategy detailed our plans on education and
awareness, improving enforcement and better cleaning and
infrastructure. I said in that strategy that I am passionate
about our need to reduce litter in this country and I meant
it.
"Many areas are similarly keen to tackle litter locally by
encouraging their communities to bin their rubbish properly
rather than littering their streets and green spaces.
“We are looking to support the most creative plans with a funding
boost from the Litter Innovation Fund.”
Welcoming the fund’s launch, Keep Britain Tidy Chief Executive
Allison Ogden-Newton, said:
“Innovation is vital if we are to change the behaviour of the
minority of people who still think it is okay to drop their
rubbish on the ground for someone else to pick up.
“Keep Britain Tidy’s Centre for Social Innovation was created to
develop and test new approaches to behaviour change and we are
delighted to see the Government has recognised the importance of
innovation to tackle the blight of littering in our country.”
All projects will be measured and evaluated to assess their
effectiveness and the most successful could be rolled out more
widely. This will ensure local authorities and communities make
the best use of a host of innovative solutions in focussing their
resources to tackle the scourge of litter.
In addition, some £45,000 of the fund will be exclusively
dedicated to projects designed to address marine littering and
help prevent the amount of plastic entering our oceans.
The fund builds on the Government’s wider Litter Strategy for
England and the Government is today also publishing responses to
the public consultation on penalties for environmental offences
including littering.
Notes to
editors:
- The Litter Innovation Fund was set up as part of the
Government’s Litter Strategy for England which was launched in
April 2017. The application bidding process will open today
[Saturday] and run until 17 November 2017 and be administered by
the sustainability not-for-profit charity WRAP.
- Information for applicants to the Litter Innovation Fund can
be found on WRAP’s website from 10am on Saturday 26
August: http://www.wrap.org.uk/
- A total of £450,000 will be available for funding to local
projects.
- The funding will be evenly provided by the Department for
Environment, Food & Rural Affairs and the Department for
Communities and Local Government and funding awarded will be
limited to a maximum of £10,000 per project.
- The full version of the government’s Litter Strategy is
available online: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/litter-strategy-for-england
- The cost of £778m in 2015/16 for street cleaning is from
Official local Government returns to DCLG: https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/local-authority-capital-expenditure-receipts-and-financing
- Research on one in five admitting to having dropped litter in
the past is from Keep Britain Tidy - Litter Droppers Segmentation
research (2010).
- Responses to the public consultation on penalties for
environmental offences including littering will be available
online from 00:01 on Saturday 26 August: https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/reducing-litter-penalties-for-environmental-offences