A recent survey on public place recycling and litter has seen a mixed bag of results, with awareness around public bins
increasing but willingness to make extra effort to use them declining.
The survey, conducted in early March by Horizon Research for The Packaging Forum, also found more people believe there
is a problem with litter where they lived, compared with a year earlier.
The survey spoke to over 1,200 people about public place recycling and rubbish bins and found the number of people who
have access to public bins continued upwards to 2.4 million adults (66% of respondents). This was an increase of 2% on
2020 and 25% from the first survey in 2014.Bins to make recycling easier, better
The Packaging Forum CEO Rob Langford says they have been working over recent years to rollout new colour-coded bins
which help making recycling and disposing of rubbish easier to get right.
“There are a lot of people who want to do the right thing and recycle, but don’t have the information to do so correctly
which causes unintended contamination issues. With the right information they have the potential to have a hugely
positive impact.”
While awareness of these colour-coded bins declined slightly to 50%, it was still well up from 37% in 2019.
“The Covid-19 pandemic has had an impact and the research shows a drop in awareness where the bins were removed during
lockdown but have not been returned,” Rob says.
It was very encouraging to see awareness was highest among people aged 18 to 24, he says. “Those aged 75 and over had
just as much awareness, so it’s the group in the middle where more focus is needed.”
The colour-coded bins have continued to be very effective, Rob says, with 81% of people reporting they made knowing what
to recycle and what to put in the rubbish easier. “This has been the consistent response over the past three years, so
the design is working.”More litter, less effort
He says it was interesting to see that while litter was perceived as more of a problem, with 34% people agreeing it was
(up 5%), individuals were less likely to make an extra effort to use public bins. The report showed 28% of people would
walk more than 40 metres to find a bin, down from 37% in 2020.
However, while attitudes towards telling someone else to pick up litter they had dropped changed little from 2020,
people were slightly more likely to pick up litter themselves – up 3% to 39%.