SWEDEN: Recycling rates continue to climb, except metal and PET

Although the report’s results are largely positive – and show that Sweden is already exceeding the EU’s overall target for packaging waste recycling – the Swedish EPA acknowledges that recycling rates for metals and PET packaging (see related story) are slowing down.

The Swedish EPA would like to see recycling rules for PET bottles updated. “PET-bottles were regulated previous to producer responsibility ordinances

and before the packaging directive,” an EPA spokesperson told edie. “The different rules are altogether not modern and compatible with each other.”

The EPA would like to develop producer responsibility as a whole. In its latest recycling report it asks whether regulation of manufacturers could be developed, or whether regulations for returnable bottles and drinks packaging can be adapted to the principles of producer responsibility.

At the moment recycling rates are presented as national figures, but the EPA has responded to a question from the Swedish Parliament’s Auditors and confirmed that recycling rates can be broken down by region and municipality, if requested. “We have no plans from our central point of view, but the results are reported locally and then aggregated so it can easily be presented locally,” says the EPA spokesperson. “Sweden is geographically large with low density of population in the northern 70% . Each municipality could prove different from its neighbour when it comes to

recycling rates.”

Recycling rates for 1999 are as follows: