
News Roundup
Illegal Waste Sites Still Spreading – Including “Super Sites”
Hundreds of illegal waste tips are reportedly operating across England, including 11 large-scale “super sites”. It’s another reminder that waste crime isn’t small-scale littering — it can be industrial, organised, and extremely damaging.
Illegal Waste Dump Linked to King’s Estate Land
One of the UK’s worst illegal waste dumps has been reported as being located on land belonging to a private estate connected to the King. It’s a story that highlights how complex land ownership, responsibility, and regulation can become once waste is dumped illegally — and how hard it is to untangle accountability once it happens.
EA Enforcement Powers Used Only 6 Times in 7 Years
A striking article reports that the Environment Agency has only used its unique enforcement powers six times since being granted them in 2018. This links closely to our recent guest episode with Samantha Riggs (Episode 86), where she discussed how the system often has the tools — but doesn’t always use them effectively.
Binfluencer EIR Request Raises Transparency Questions
A LinkedIn post shares an Environmental Information Regulations (EIR) request — highlighting how important transparency and accessible information are in the waste sector. When the public and professionals can’t easily access clear data, trust drops and misinformation spreads fast.
SEPA Appeal After Illegal Waste Deposits in Ayrshire
SEPA has appealed for public help following two significant illegal waste deposits in Ayrshire. This is a reminder that illegal dumping isn’t just an England problem — it impacts communities across Scotland too.
Court Dismisses Biffa’s £51.4m Scottish DRS Claim
Another update in the long-running Deposit Return Scheme story: the court has dismissed Biffa’s £51.4m damages claim relating to Scotland’s DRS. The wider impacts of DRS delays and changes continue to ripple through the sector.
Magnet Recycling Idea Goes Commercial
Some positive innovation news: scientists’ work on recycling magnets is moving toward commercial reality. With magnets found in a growing range of electronics and tech, this kind of progress could become increasingly important for the circular economy.
Topic of the Week: The Waste Journey of Tyres
Tyres are everywhere — on cars, vans, trucks, bikes, plant equipment — but most people don’t think about them as a waste stream until they’re being replaced. Alasdair and Jane unpack what happens behind the scenes once tyres are removed, and why they’re far more complicated than they look.
The discussion covers how tyres are collected through garages and commercial routes, then moved through processing systems where they may be reused, shredded, granulated, or turned into other products. Tyres can be valuable as a material because they contain rubber and steel, but they’re also challenging because they’re bulky, tough to break down, and expensive to transport.
They also explore where tyre material ends up, including the reality that a significant proportion is exported — and how global markets influence what’s “recyclable” in practice. Even when tyres are being recovered, the final destination matters: reuse and proper recycling can support circular economy goals, but poorly controlled export routes risk pushing the environmental burden elsewhere.
Overall, this episode is a reminder that tyres are not “just rubbish” — they’re a major waste stream with real carbon, cost, and compliance implications depending on how they’re handled.
Rubbish Rant: When “Recycling” Becomes Someone Else’s Problem
This week’s rant focuses on the uncomfortable truth that some waste streams — including tyres — can end up being shipped overseas, where the environmental controls, worker protections, and end destinations may be far less clear. The conversation touches on the risks of treating export as an easy solution, rather than investing in domestic capacity and proper accountability.