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Container-deposit legislation

Container-deposit legislation (also known as a container-deposit scheme, deposit-refund system or scheme, deposit-return system, or bottle bill) is any law that requires the collection of a monetary deposit on beverage containers (refillable or non-refillable) at the point of sale and/or the payment of refund value to the consumers. When the container is returned to an authorized redemption center, or retailer in some jurisdictions, the deposit is partly or fully refunded to the redeemer (presumed to be the original purchaser). It is a deposit-refund system.

A deposit return machine for glass bottles, plastic bottles and bottle crates (left) in a Dutch supermarket
Refillable glass bottles collected, and deposits refunded, at a collection point in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan. Deposit values (from 50 tyiyn to 2 Kyrgyz som, i.e. 2–5 U.S. cents) for various bottle types are posted next to the sample bottles on a rack.

Governments may pass container deposit legislation for several reasons, including to encourage recycling and complement existing curbside recycling programs; to reduce energy and material usage for containers, to reduce beverage container litter along highways, in lakes and rivers, and on other public or private properties (where beverage container litter occurs, a nominal deposit provides an economic incentive to clean it up, which can be a significant source of income to some poor individuals and non-profit civic organizations); and to extend the usable lifetime of taxpayer-funded landfills.

Deposits that are not redeemed are often kept by distributors or bottlers to cover the costs of the system (including handling fees paid to retailers or redemption centers to collect, sort, and handle the containers) or are escheated to the governmental entity involved to fund environmental programs. Studies have shown that container-deposit schemes are generally very successful in practice, with return rates commonly reaching up to 90% or more.[1]

History edit

A & R Thwaites & Co in Dublin, Ireland, announced in 1799 the provision of artificial "soda water" and that they paid 2 shillings a dozen for returned bottles. Schweppes, who were also in the business of artificially made mineral waters, had a similar recycling policy from about 1800, without any legislation.[2] Scottish bottled beverage companies also voluntarily introduced such a scheme to encourage the return of their bottles for reuse.[3] In Sweden a standard system for deposits on bottles and recycling was established in 1884, eventually by law. The popular demand for a deposit on aluminium cans to reduce littering led to legislation in 1984.[citation needed]

British Columbia's legislated deposit-return system, enacted in 1970, is the oldest such program in North America.[4]

Laws by country edit

Overview edit

Container-deposit schemes by jurisdiction
Country Implementation Aluminium Glass PET Beverages Covered Driver Ref.
  Austria 1990, last amended 2025       Beer and beer mixes, alcoholic beverage mixes, cider and other fermented beverages, juices and nectars, soft drinks, waters, wines and spirits Government [5]
  Barbados 1986, last amended 2019       Carbonated and non-carbonated soft drinks, mineral and soda water, beer and malt beverages Government [6]
  Belarus TBA       All beverages except dairy-based products Government [7]
  Belgium 1993       Refillable beer containers Government [8]
  Croatia 2005, last amended 2020       Containers >200mL: juices, water, beer, wine, hard liquor; Containers <200mL: milk and dairy products Government [9]
  Denmark 1981, last amended 2020       Beer, carbonated and uncarbonated soft drinks, energy drinks, fermented drink products (excluding wine and spirits), cider, alcoholic and non-alcoholic mixer products, mineral water, juice Industry (1922)[10] Government (1981) [11][12]
  Ecuador 2012       Alcoholic, non-alcoholic, carbonated, and non-carbonated beverages Government [13]
  Estonia 2005       Soft drinks, water, beer, cider, juice, nectars and juice concentrate, low-ethanol alcoholic beverages (≤ 6% alcohol by volume) Government [14]
  Fiji TBA       TBA Government [15]
  Finland 1996 (cans) / 2008 (PET) / 2012 (glass)       Almost all soft drinks, water, beer, cider, long drinks, sport drinks, juice, liquor/spirits/wine sold by Alko Government or Manufacturer [16]
  Germany 2003, last amended 2019       Beer, soft drinks (carbonated and non-carbonated), water, mixed alcoholic drinks, juice in PET bottles (expected to be implemented January 2022) Manufacturer [17]
  Iceland 1989       All ready-to-drink beverages, wine and liquor Government [18]
  Ireland 2024       All beverages except dairy products Government [19][20]
  Israel 2001, last amended 2010       All containers between 100mL and 5L Government [21]
  Jamaica 2021       Unknown Government [22][23]
  Latvia 2022       Water, mineral water, lemonade, energy drinks, tea, juices and nectars, beer, wine coolers and mixed drinks with less than 6% alcohol content Government [24]
  Lithuania 2016       Beer and beer cocktails, cider and perry, fruit wine and fruit-wine-based drinks, soft drinks, water, kvass, juices and nectar Government [25]
  Luxemburg 2023       All beverages Government [26]
  Kiribati 2005       Beer, soft drinks, water Government [27]
  Malta 2022       Water, carbonated and non-carbonated soft drinks, ciders, beers, ready-to-drink coffee, and dilutables Manufacturer [28]
  Micronesia (Kosrae) 1991, last amended in 2007       Unknown Government [29]
  India (Maharashtra) 2018, last amended 2019       Unknown Government [30]
  Netherlands 2004, last amended 2021       Beer, water, soft drinks, system is opt-in for fruit juice producers Government [31]

[32]

  Norway 1997, last amended 1999       Unknown Government [33]
  Palau 2011       Beer and ales, mixed wine and spirits, tea and coffee-based drinks, soda, non-carbonated water, all non-alcoholic drinks Government [34]
  Poland 2025       TBA Government [35]
  Romania 2023       All beverages (except milk) in single-use containers up to 3 liters Government [36]
  Scotland 2025       TBA Government [37]
  Seychelles 2007       Unknown Government [38]
  Singapore 2025       Unknown Government [39]
  Slovakia 2022       Water, beer, juices, wine Government [40][41]
  South Korea 1985, last amended 2003       Alcoholic drinks, such as soju and beer, carbonated soft drinks Government [42]
  Sweden 1982, last amended 2022       All ready-to-drink beverages, excluding dairy and juices Government [43][44][45][46]
   Switzerland 2001       All beverages in refillable containers, one-way soft drinks, beer and mineral water Government [47]
  Turkey 2022       Tea and coffee, carbonated soft drinks, energy drinks, cow milk, fruit and vegetable juices, water (sparkling and non-sparkling), sports drinks, alcoholic beverages Government [48]
  United Kingdom 2025       Unknown Government [49][50]

Africa edit

Kenya edit

By 2005, the beverage industry in Kenya applied a deposit-refund system for glass bottles that had proven to be popular amongst wholesalers, retailers and consumers alike to participate in, not just in Nairobi, but throughout the country. At the time, there was a deposit of 10 Kenyan shillings on soft drink bottles, and 25 shillings on beer bottles.[51]

South Africa edit

Although there is no formalised deposit-return scheme for packaging or plastics in South Africa, individual companies such as Coca-Cola have implemented deposit-return schemes for their own products with success.[52] Manufacturers introduced this system without involvement of the government around 1948. Approximately 75% of beer containers, 45% of soft drink containers, and some wine and spirits bottles participate in the scheme.: 94  South Africa was noted in 2012 as one of the few countries that included plastic bottles in its schemes.[1] Aside from bottles, similar deposit-refund schemes exist in South Africa for batteries, cars, and tyres.[53]

Americas edit

 
Container-deposit legislation in North America.
  Container deposits on most bottles and cans
  Container deposits only on beer/alcoholic beverage containers
  Container deposits discontinued
  No container deposits

By 1998, there were voluntary deposit-refund schemes for glass containers in Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Jamaica, Mexico and Venezuela.[54]

Canada edit

In 1970, British Columbia became the first Canadian province to establish a mandatory deposit-return system for soft drinks and beer containers.[citation needed] As of 2021, nearly all provinces and territories in Canada have followed suit; the territory of Nunavut is the only jurisdiction in Canada that has yet to implement some sort of deposit refund system. In Ontario, only containers of alcoholic beverages come with deposits, in Manitoba only beer containers participate in the deposit scheme.[55]

Deposits range from CAD$0.05 to CAD$0.40 per unit depending on the material and size of the container and whether the container contains an alcoholic or non-alcoholic beverage.[citation needed]

Below is a brief summary of each program:[56]

  • British Columbia: While the original program covered only carbonated soft drinks and beer, the deposit legislation expanded to include any ready-to-serve beverage sold in a container that is sealed by its manufacturer (e.g. bottled water, juice, new age drinks, and alcohol). There are currently two stewardship agencies in BC that carry out deposit-refund obligations on behalf of beverage producers: Encorp Pacific (for non-alcoholic beverages, wine, spirits, some ciders and coolers, and some import beer) and Brewers Distributor Ltd. (BDL) (for domestic coolers, beers, and ciders). In 2017, BC's program recovered over 1 billion containers for an overall return-rate of 75.8%.[57] Bottle deposit on single use beverage containers have increased to CDN $0.10 from CDN $0.05 in November 2019.[58] As of February 2022 milk and milk substitute containers are also refundable.[59]
  • Alberta: All beverage containers (glass bottles, metal cans, Tetra Paks, gable-top cartons, bags-in-boxes, plastic bottles and jugs, drink pouches), including milk containers (Alberta was the first jurisdiction in North America to accept and charge a deposit on milk containers in June 2009), are charged deposits at the point of sale; 10¢ for containers 1 L or less, and 25¢ for containers larger than 1 L. Containers can be dropped off at depots and are picked up by the Alberta Beverage Container Recycling Corporation. In 2014, over 2 billion beverage containers were returned to Alberta depots for an overall return rate of 83%.[citation needed]
  • Saskatchewan: Established in 1988, Saskatchewan's deposit-return program applies to all ready-to-serve beverage containers, except those for meal replacements, or dietary supplements. SARCAN began taking milk and milk substitutes on April 1, 2017. SARCAN Recycling is responsible for administering the program and operates under contract to the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment. In fiscal 2014–2015, a total of 405.6 million beverage containers were returned to SARCAN recycling depots for an overall container return rate of 87%.[citation needed]
  • Manitoba: Manitoba's program was implemented in 2010 and is limited to beer containers, which are charged a deposit of CAD$0.10 or $0.20 depending on the size. Other containers (except milk) are charged a non-refundable $0.02 per unit levy (Container Recycling Fee) and can be recycled in municipal curbside recycling programs.[citation needed]
  • Ontario: The Ontario Deposit Return Program (ODRP), which came into force in February 2007, is a voluntary program implemented by the provincial government that covers wine, spirits, and imported beer containers (plastics, metal, bimetal, glass, gable top, Tetra Pak, bag-in-box containers). Because there is no law mandating that wine and spirits be placed on deposit, they may be added to municipal blue box programs voluntarily. Refillable and non-refillable beer containers are collected through a separate program administered and operated by Brewers Retail Inc. (The Beer Store). Alcoholic beverage containers, as well as any associated packaging, can be returned to 443 beer store locations, 113 breweries (beer containers only), 141 retail partner stores, 63 LCBO northern agency stores, 4 additional LCBO stores, and 115 empty bottle dealers (small independent depots contracted in more remote locations where beer retailers are not available), for a total of 879 redemption locations. TBS trucks collect these empty containers and back-haul them to various distribution centres where recyclables are sent to a processing facility for sorting, baling, and shipping to market. Refillable bottles are sent back to the brewers for washing and refill. Containers returned through Ontario's deposit-return system showed a total recycling rate of 89% for 2014–2015, while refillable beer bottles were returned at a rate of 98%.[citation needed]
 
A reverse vending machine in a Montreal grocery store.
  • Quebec: Quebec's deposit-return system was established in 1984 and covers beer and carbonated soft drink containers. Deposits range from CAD$0.05¢ to $0.20 depending on the size, material and content of the container. Boissons Gazeuses Environnement (BGE) administers the program for non-refillable soft-drink containers on behalf of industry, while Recyc-Quebec oversees the beer container collection program. In 2014, the recycling rate for containers recovered via the deposit-return system was 78% (includes data for refillable bottles).[citation needed]
  • New Brunswick: This program was created in 1992 and covers all ready-to-drink, non-refillable beverage containers 5 L and under, including soft-drinks, beer, wine, spirits, flavoured waters, fruit juices, vegetable juices, and low alcohol drinks. Containers for milk and milk products (and substitutes) as well as processed apple cider are exempt. Encorp Atlantic Inc. is the stewardship agency responsible for managing the collection, transportation, and partial processing of non-alcoholic beverage containers on behalf of brand-owners, and New Brunswick Liquor (NB Liquor) is responsible for the collection of alcoholic beverage containers. Program oversight is the responsibility of the Department of Environment. New Brunswick's deposit-return program is somewhat unique in that it operates under a "half-back" model where only half of the original deposit is refunded to the consumer when a container is returned for recycling. The unrefunded portion of the deposit is used to cover the costs of administering the program and part of it also goes towards the province's Environmental Trust Fund, which is used for environmental conservation and other provincial initiatives aimed at reducing waste. In 2014, New Brunswick's recycling rate for non-refillable containers was 73%.[citation needed]
  • Newfoundland and Labrador: In 1996 the provincial government established The Multi Materials Stewardship Board (MMSB) as a self funded crown agency, Intended to develop, implement and manage waste diversion programs for various specific waste streams, province wide.[60] The following year MMSB began a licensing and standardization framework for recycling depots. Branded as Green Depot, all locations are independently owned and operated enterprises.[61] There are 55 Green Depots[62] province wide accepting non refillable ready-to-serve beverage containers for refund, excluding those for milk & milk alternatives, infant formula, meal replacement, beverage concentrates, distilled water bottles and containers over 5 liters. Refillable glass beer bottles are not included in MMSB's used beverage container program as local brewers regulate refillable beer bottle return. Brewers agents, breweries, and most convenience stores selling beer will accept back these bottles for store credit or sometimes cash at 10¢ per bottle being a full return of the initial deposit. A limited number of Green Depots do accept back refillable glass beer bottles for a 5¢ return depending on their location. Non refillable deposits sit in two categories with containers for non-alcoholic drinks, beer, miniature spirit bottles under 50ml and spirits in tetra-pak, gable top and pouch type containers being charged an 8¢ deposit and refunding 5¢. Containers for spirits primarily in larger glass and plastic bottles charge a deposit of 20¢ and refund at 10¢.[63] Since 1997 over 3.37 billion containers have been diverted from landfill through Newfoundland and Labrador Green Depots.[62] Additionally since 2013 Hebert's Recycling inc, has been collecting and processing all recyclable containers from Green Depot locations using its patented Enviopactor system of truck mounted recycling compactors to streamline recycling shipments from depots to centralized facilities.[62]
  • Nova Scotia: Launched on 1 April 1996, Nova Scotia's deposit-return program applies to all ready-to-drink beverage containers excluding milk, milk products, soya milk and rice beverages. Other containers that are exempt from the program are certain meal replacements, formulated liquid diets, foods for very low energy diets, thickened juices, baby formulas, concentrates and non-alcoholic beverages in containers of 5 L or more. The organization responsible for managing the program is DivertNS (formerly the Resource Recovery Fund Board Inc.). Like New Brunswick's program, Nova Scotia's deposit-return system is based on a "half-back" model where only half of the original deposit paid per container is refunded to the consumer. The non-refundable portion of the deposit is used as revenue by DivertNS to help pay for program costs. In 2014, the program collected 334 million non-refillable beverage containers for a recycling rate of 84%.[citation needed]
  • Prince Edward Island: The province's deposit-return system was launched on 3 May 2008 as a replacement to a law that had prohibited the sale of non-refillable soft drink containers. The program is overseen and administered by the Department of Environment, Energy and Forestry and covers all ready-to-drink beverage containers up to 5 L, except those used for dairy products, milk substitutes or nutritional supplements. Similar to the other Atlantic provinces, PEI's deposit-return system is based on a "half-back" model where only 50% of the original deposit paid is refunded to the consumer when he/she returns the empty container to a depot. In 2014–2015, PEI had a non-refillable beverage container recycling rate of 80% and a total container recycling rate of 82%.[citation needed]
  • Yukon: Introduced in 1992, Yukon's deposit-return program covers all ready-to-drink beverage containers (glass, plastic, steel, aluminium, and Tetra Pak), excluding those containing milk and milk substitutes. The program is managed by the Department of Community Services and requires consumers to pay a surcharge on the purchase of certain beverage containers, which includes a refundable deposit and a non-refundable recycling fund fee (RFF). Upon return of the empty container to a depot or processor, a portion of the surcharge (the refundable deposit) is refunded to the consumer, while the non-refundable RFF is kept by the retailer and remitted to the territorial Recycling Fund, where unredeemed deposits also go. In 2014, Yukon had a non-refillable recycling rate of 82%. In May 2016, the Yukon government announced changes to the Beverage Container Regulation. These changes, which were expected to be implemented 1 August 2017, will affect the surcharges and refunds applicable to beverage containers including milk and milk substitutes and will simplify the regulation. Once the territory's new regulations kick in, all beverage containers will fall into two categories: (1) 750 ml and less, including all milk & milk substitutes (surcharge 10 cents, refund 5 cents), and (2) 750 ml and more (surcharge 35 cents, refund 25 cents).[citation needed]
  • Northwest Territories: Launched on 1 November 2005, Northwest Territories' deposit-return program covers all ready-to-serve beverage containers made of glass, plastics, aluminium, bi-metal, and mixed materials, including juice, milk and liquid milk products (added February 2010), soda, water, beer, wine, liquor and other alcoholic beverages. Excluded from the program are containers for infant formula; containers for milk and liquid milk products smaller than 30 ml; and powder milk. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DNR) is responsible for administering the program. Similar to Yukon's program, the total surcharge per container includes a refundable deposit and a non-refundable handling fee. Whereas the refundable deposit is returned to the consumer when they return the beverage container to a depot, the non-refundable handing fee is put into the Environment Fund and is used to help cover program costs. In fiscal 2014, approximately 26 million beverage containers were returned for reuse or recycling, translating into an overall recycling rate of 89%.[citation needed]

Peru edit

Peru has a deposit on some bottles of 620 millilitres (ml).: 94 

United States edit

There are currently 10 states in the United States with the container deposit legislation.

  • California: Enacted in 1981 and operated by CalRecycle, California's bottle bill charges a 5¢ refundable deposit on containers less than 24 US fluid ounces (710 ml), and 10¢ for containers 24 US fluid ounces (710 ml) or greater.[citation needed]
  • Connecticut: Connecticut's bottle bill was introduced in 1980, but was expanded in 2009 to include bottled water. The deposit is the same for all container types and is 5¢.[citation needed]
  • Hawaii: Hawaii's bottle bill has been in place since 2005 and is government-operated. A refundable deposit of 5¢ is charged on all plastic (PET, HDPE), metal, bi-metal, and glass beverage containers 2 l or less, except for milk and dairy products. In 2015, the system achieved a total return rate of 68%.[citation needed]
  • Iowa: Introduced in 1979,[64] The deposit is uniform across beverage categories and is currently 5¢. Unredeemed funds are kept by beverage distributors and it has been found to be highly profitable to them.[65]
  • Maine: Established in 1978 after a ballot initiative,[66] Maine's bottle bill charges a 5¢ deposit on plastic, metal, and glass containers and 15¢ for most liquor and wine bottles.[67]
  • Massachusetts: The state's bottle bill was effective as of January 17, 1983.[68] The deposit levied is 5¢.[citation needed]
  • Michigan: Implemented in 1978, Michigan's bottle bill charges a 10¢ deposit on plastic, metal, glass, and paper containers less than 1 gallon.[69]
  • New York: New York's bottle bill has been in place since January 12, 1983.[70] New York charges a 5¢ deposit on plastic, metal, and glass containers 3.78 l or less.[citation needed]
  • Oregon: The Oregon Bottle Bill, enacted in 1972, was the first container deposit legislation in the United States. The deposit/refund value is uniformly 10¢ per applicable container.[71] The deposit is held by the beverage industry cooperative and they keep all the unclaimed deposit.[65]
  • Vermont: Implemented in 1973, Vermont's bottle bill charges a 5¢ deposit on plastic, metal, and glass beer, wine coolers and other malt beverages, soft drinks and other carbonated beverage containers. Most liquor and spirits bottles are charged a deposit of 15¢.[citation needed]

States that formerly had can deposit regulation:

Asia edit

Israel edit

In Israel, there is a 0.30-shekel (₪) deposit on beverage containers over 100 mL and under 5 L, except for dairy products. The system is operated by the ELA Recycling Corporation, a private non-profit organization owned by Israel's beverage manufacturers. Businesses are required to accept bottles if they sold them, or if they are over 28 square meters and sell beverages from the same manufacturer or importer. Businesses are not required to accept more than 50 bottles per customer per day. The deposit was initially ₪0.25, but was raised shortly after the ₪0.05 coin was discontinued.[72]

In 2015, the system achieved a total return rate of 77%.[73]

Most 500 ml beer bottles (local brands such as Goldstar and Maccabee plus certain imported ones like Carlsberg and Tuborg) have a deposit of ₪1.20, and are willingly accepted even by smaller businesses (plastic water bottles, glass wine bottles and soda cans are mostly accepted by larger supermarket chains, some of which possess reverse vending machines).[74] In order to collect more products with its large storage area, Aco Recycling introduced G-1 Smart Reverse Vending Machines with 3 Shredder for Asofta; official operator for deposit scheme in Israel.

Japan edit

The container deposit legislation, as a monetary approach to the garbage/recycling problem, has never caught on in Japan. However, under increasingly ever stricter sorting rules announced by each town or city, garbage is meticulously sorted into kitchen garbage, newspapers/books, metal cans (washed)/plastic bottles (rinsed), garden weeds, etc. in each neighborhood for pickup by collection cars, usually on different days notified by the local government.[75]

South Korea edit

By 1997, South Korea had introduced a deposit-refund system for beverage containers.[54]

Taiwan edit

By 1997, Taiwan had introduced a deposit-refund scheme for PET soft drink bottles.[54]

Turkey edit

In Turkey, a recycling pilot project was launched in 2018, where plastic bottles and cans could be deposited at vending machines at three Istanbul Metro stations in return for credit on a public transport ticket card.[76] In 2021, the Turkish government decided to introduce deposit return system (DRS) by January 1, 2022, to protect Turkey's 8,000-kilometer coastline. The upcoming deposit refund scheme is expected to help reduce different types of litter, such as land and marine litter, and prohibit packaging waste from damaging landfills within the country. One of the main reasons the Turkish government has implemented DRS is that it will increase the recycling of plastic and glass containers by 250 percent and help turn the 811,000 tons of glass and plastic containers thrown into landfills each year into secondary raw materials.[77]

Oceania edit

Australia edit

 
Reverse container vending machine in Kooringal, New South Wales
 
CDL/CDS status in Australian states and territories
  Scheme in effect
  Planned scheme (Tasmania: 2024)

In the days when bottles were washed and re-used, drinks manufacturers paid for the return of their (proprietary) containers, but with the advent of single-use containers great savings were possible, leaving their disposal as the consumer's responsibility.

While a national scheme has been repeatedly delayed largely due to threats from the beverage industry of multi-million dollar advertisements against politicians who support it and earlier disagreements between states,[78] there has been a growing momentum of state-based operated container deposit schemes (CDS). All states have implemented or will introduce a state-based container deposit scheme operating by 2023, with Victoria the final jurisdiction to support such a scheme.[79] With 8 billion beverage containers landfilled or littered every year in Australia, proponents argue that it is the most effective method to reduce such litter; and improve recycling above that achieved by kerbside. It also has many co-benefits such as funds for charities and several thousand new jobs, that cannot be achieved by other approaches.[80]

  • The state of South Australia charges a refundable deposit of AUD 10 cents per drinks carton, can or bottle (only containers marked as eligible for refund; does not include wine & spirits bottles, milk cartons, or concentrated/and or vegetable juice intended to be diluted before consumption). This has been in place since 1977.[81] The overall return rate is 79.9%.[82]
  • Northern Territory introduced a container deposit scheme in 2012. A 10-cent (AUD) refundable deposit is charged on all beverage containers with the exception of unflavoured milk, soy milk, cordial bottles (undiluted), concentrated fruit/vegetable juice intended to be diluted before consumption, and still or sparkling wine (in glass bottles). Unredeemed deposits remain with the producer/filler. In 2015–2016, the system achieved a total return rate of 54%.[83]
  • The state of New South Wales (the most populated state, with 7.5 million residents) announced that it would be adopting a 10-cent (AUD) deposit scheme, which commenced on 1 December 2017.[84] The program has achieved a return rate of 69%.[85]
  • On 22 July 2016, the Queensland government announced that the state would introduce a container deposit scheme which commenced on 1 November 2018.[86] A 10 cent (AUD) refund is provided for empty drink containers between 150 ml and 3 l.[87]
  • The state of Western Australia has announced the start date of a state-based scheme commencing in 2020.[88] The scheme will apply to certain empty drink containers ranging in size from 150 ml to 3 L and will exclude domestically consumed drink containers such as wine and spirit bottles, milk and juice containers. The amount of the deposit/refund will be AUD 10-cents.[89]
  • Tasmania has, as of June 2019 announced it will have a scheme in place by 2024.[citation needed]
  • Victoria announced it would introduce a scheme which commenced on 1 November 2023 as part of its updated recycling and waste management policies.[90][91]

Fiji edit

The United Nations Development Programme had funded a feasibility study to look at the possibility of establishing a deposit-return system in Fiji, building on the experience gained from their successful projects in Kiribati and the Federated States of Micronesia.[92]

In 2011, the Fijian Government approved the Environment Management Waste Disposal and Recycling Amendment Regulations 2011, and the Environment Management Container Deposit Regulations 2011.[93] The Regulations provide the legal framework for the introduction of a container deposit and refund system, allowing beverage producers and importers to adjust pricing and accommodate deposits.[94] The Regulations will also allow the Department of Environment to register and establish the Managing Agency that will administer Fiji's container deposit system, and establish a revolving fund account to receive all deposits paid by producers for all beverages sold.[95] No further details are available.[96]

New Zealand edit

Single-use containers were increasingly introduced between the 1950s[97] and 1980s.[98][99] New Zealand had no container-deposit legislation until 2008 when the Waste Minimisation Act 2008 passed into law. The Act has provision for product stewardship of which container-deposit legislation is the most familiar type. As of 2010 there is no widespread deposits available on containers with some beer bottles being a notable exception. The Ministry for the Environment is working on a container return scheme, which may be introduced in about 2023.[100]

Europe edit

 
Container-deposit legislation in Europe.[note 1]
  Container deposits on PET bottles and cans
  Container deposits on PET bottles, but not on cans
  Planned introduction of container deposits on PET bottles and cans
  No container deposits on PET bottles and cans

Austria edit

Austria has a container-deposit system for refillable PET bottles since 1990. In 2022, Austria announced a 25-cent deposit that will be levied on all plastic bottles from 100ml up to three litres and aluminium cans in 2025, according to the Climate Protection Ministry.[105]

Belgium edit

Smaller beer bottles (250 or 330 mL) carry a 0.10 deposit, and larger ones (750 mL or 1 L) a €0.20 one. Some fruit-juice bottles, such as those sold by Oxfam Wereldwinkels/Magasins du Monde, carry a €0.30 deposit. Some hard plastic milk and orange juice bottles such as those sold by Delhaize carry a €0.20 deposit. In April 2019 the Brussels Capital Region started a project to test out an expansion of the system to cans, which hold a €0.05 deposit.[106] After the 2019 Belgian regional elections the new Brussels regional government decided to introduce the deposit system for cans, as well as for plastic bottles.[107]

Croatia edit

Since 2006, a refundable deposit of 0.50 kn has been levied on non-refillable containers (except dairy products) with minimum volume of 200 mL (7.0 imp fl oz; 6.8 US fl oz). Retailers over 200 m2 (2,200 sq ft) are obliged to take-back containers. Collection is mostly manual, although some collection occurs with reverse vending machines. Retailers must sort containers by material type (PET bottles, aluminium/steel cans, and glass bottles). The scheme is government operated and there is a collection target of 95%. In 2015, the scheme recovered up to 90% of all non-refillable containers placed on the Croatian market.[108]

Czech Republic edit

In the Czech Republic most beer is sold in returnable glass bottles that carry a CZK 3 deposit. These bottles are collected by shops and supermarkets. Reverse vending machines have mostly replaced human staff. There is also a CZK 100 deposit on plastic beer crates with a 20 bottle capacity. Most reverse vending machines accept an entire crate full of empty bottles, returning CZK 160. There is no deposit on other containers.[citation needed]

Denmark edit

In Denmark, the first national deposit-return system was introduced in 1922, when the Danish breweries agreed on a standardized glass bottle for beer and carbonized drinks, due to the limited resources available during and in the aftermath of World War I.[109][110] In 1991 and 1993 this was expanded to also include plastic bottles. Aluminium beverage cans were forbidden from 1982 to 2002, but this ban was found to violate European Union law, and to get into compliance Denmark introduced new legislation in 2002, extending the deposit scheme to also cover aluminium cans.[109][111]

The law covers beer (alcohol content >0.5% by volume), carbonated soft drinks (alcohol content 0-0.5%), energy drinks, mineral water, iced tea, ready-to-drink beverages, and mixer products (alcohol content 0.5%-10%); juice and uncarbonated soft drinks were added to the deposit scheme in 2019–2020. Excluded from the scheme are wine and spirits (alcohol content >10%), products containing milk, and containers larger than 20 liters.[111][112][113] The deposit levels are as follows:[114]

  • Disposable aluminium and glass containers under 1 L and refillable glass bottles under 0.5 L, labelled "Pant A": 1 DKK.
  • Disposable and refillable plastic containers under 1 L, labelled "Pant B": 1.5 DKK.
  • Metal and plastic containers equal to or greater than 1 L or refillable glass bottles over 0.5 L, labelled "Pant C": 3 DKK.

The deposit system operator is Dansk Retursystem A/S, a private non-profit organization. Most collection (95%) is done automatically using reverse vending machines, but some (5%) is done manually.[115] In 2019, the system achieved a total return rate of 92%.[116]

Estonia edit

 
Deposit symbol in Estonia ("B" on a 1.5 L-bottle)

In Estonia there is a universal deposit and recycling system since 2005 for one-time and refillable containers. This includes soft drinks, water, beer, cider, juice, juice concentrates, nectars, and low-ethanol alcoholic beverages (up to 6% volume). The deposit is €0.10 on most metal, plastic, and glass beverage containers. It does not include strong alcoholic beverages, such as wine or vodka, syrup bottles, glass jars, or Tetra Paks.[117] Since 2019, the system has been set to also accept some out-of-system bottles within accepted categories, though people will not receive a deposit for those. The system is operated by Eesti Pandipakend OÜ, which is a producer responsibility organization representing the Estonian Association of Brewers, the Association of Producers of Soft Drinks, the Association of Importers of Soft Drinks and Beer, and the Estonian Retailers Association.[citation needed]

In 2015, 90% of all PET bottles, 70% of all aluminium cans and 87% of all glass bottles sold in Estonia were returned for recycling and/or reuse. The overall return rate was 82.3%.[118]

Finland edit

Deposit system was first introduced to Finland in 1952 along with summer Olympic Games which brought Coca-Cola to the country – in glass bottles. In the 1980s some re-usable and durable plastic bottles were included in the deposit system. Deposits were introduced on aluminium cans in 1996, on PET bottles in 2008, and on recycled glass bottles in 2012. Almost all soft drinks are covered by the program, in addition to water, beer, cider, long drinks, sport drinks, juice, and liquor/spirits/wine sold by Alko. Milk and other products packed in liquid packaging board are exempt. The system is administered by Suomen palautuspakkaus Oy (abbr. Palpa), which is a private consortium of beverage importers and manufacturers. In 2016, aluminium cans were recovered at a rate of 96%, PET bottles 92%, and one-way glass 88%.[119] The deposit values for these containers are as follows:[73]

  • Plastic <0.35 L: 0.10
  • Plastic 0.35–1 L: €0.20
  • Plastic >1 L: €0.40
  • Metal: €0.15
  • Glass: €0.10

The scheme is, in technical sense, voluntary and Palpa does not hold a legal monopoly for container deposits systems. Lidl has its own levy system for Lidl bottles. Those beverage containers that do not belong to a container deposit system are levied an excise tax of €0.51/L, regardless of the container size.[120] The tax is so high that essentially all beverage manufacturers and importers opt to join the Palpa system instead of paying the excise tax.[121]

Germany edit

 
Reverse vending machine in an Aldi supermarket in Germany.

In Germany, the deposit legislation covers plastic, aluminium, and glass containers for water, beer, mixed drinks containing beer, carbonated and non-carbonated soft drinks including fruit juices, as well as mixed alcoholic drinks. Excluded from the programme are containers for milk products, wine, spirits, liquors, and certain dietary drinks. Also excluded are containers smaller than 100 mL and larger than 3 L.[122] Germany was noted in 2012 as one of the few countries that included plastic bottles in its schemes.[1]

There is separate legislation (known as Einwegpfand or single use deposit) for non-reusable containers, mostly thin plastic bottles and aluminium cans, distinct from (Mehrwegpfand reusable deposit) for reusable containers, mostly glass and thicker plastic.[123]

Legislation for an Einwegpfand (single use) deposit system was created in 2002 and came into force on 1 January 2003.[124] However, its implementation was fought by lobby groups of German bottling industry and retailers. This fight also included trials at the Federal Administrative Court of Germany and the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany, but all trials were won by the German federal government.[125]

The deposit charge for Einwegpfand containers is required to be relatively high. As of October 2016, the standard deposit for these is 0.25. By comparison, the deposit for reusable containers (mostly glass bottles) is usually between 8 and 15 cents. The usual rates are locally €0.02 for some wine bottles, €0.08 for beer bottles up to 0.5 L, and €0.15 for beer bottles with flip-top closures, beer bottles over 0.5 L and other bottles (mostly water and soft-drinks, lesser fruit drinks, milk, cream, yoghurt). Some bottles have an even higher deposit. Bottle crates have a deposit of €1.50.[126]

The reasoning behind the price discrepancy was to keep environmentally-harmful plastics from ending up as litter or in the regular garbage system.[127] It was also meant to make non-reusable beverage containers more expensive and thus, less attractive.[127]

 
German plastic bottle with an Einwegpfand sign

Retailers are only obliged to take back the material fractions that they sell. The deposit for refillable bottles is not defined by law. Germany's collection system is 80% automated and 20% manual. Most supermarkets in Germany have a reverse vending machine that is designed to be used by customers and which scans "Pfand" returns and prints a receipt for the total value of the refund which can be exchanged for cash or put towards the cost of future purchases.[128]

Supermarkets near the Danish border have established a scheme, where Scandinavian residents are exempt from "Pfand", by signing an "Export declaration" and providing that cans are exported within 24 hours and the contents are not consumed within Germany.[129]

The system has successfully encouraged the recycling of Einwegpfand containers. Between 97 and 99% of non-reusable bottles are returned, and recycling rates for cans are around 99%.[127] On the other hand, the percentage of containers being sold that are reusable has actually decreased from about 80% to below 50% since the system was established.[127] Since manufacturers keep the deposit on any unreturned containers, they are effectively incentivized to produce Einwegpfand containers which yield a higher profit if they are not returned. One estimate suggests they have earned €3bn on unreturned bottles since the system was introduced.[127]

At any given time, an estimated 2 billion beer bottles are in circulation in Germany, each of which sees an average of 36 reuses.[130]

Hungary edit

In Hungary, beer, wine and standardized liquor bottles carry a deposit on them, which was liberalized in the recent past. Beer bottles have 25 forints on them, but for wine glasses and for liquor bottles, the sum is decided by the trader, which people can exploit by buying a drink in a certain retailer and bringing the bottle back to its rival who have a bigger deposit on it. PET bottles and metal beverage containers are taken back only by some super- and hypermarkets, such as Lidl, Auchan, Tesco, Interspar. They all use reverse vending machines to collect them: for bottles and in most places for the PET bottles they use a Wincor-Nixdorf or a Tomra machine, while ALU cans are collected by the Hungarian ALU-press machine. Its advantage is that it accepts flattened or pressed cans as well, and it crushes them with a pressing machine, thus improving the storage capacity of the machine. The containers' prices - 2 forints/ALU can and 1 forint/PET bottle - do not widely motivate people to revend these containers.[citation needed]

Iceland edit

Iceland has had a deposit system on a national scale for a wide range of containers (plastic, aluminium, and glass) since 1989.[131] All ready-to-drink beverages, wine, and liquor are included in the program. Milk, milk products, and juice extracts are excluded. The deposit is the same for all bottles and cans, ISK 18.[132]

The recycling rate per product is approximately 90% aluminium, 87% PET. Glass is not recycled.[citation needed]

Ireland edit

Ireland introduced a Deposit Return Scheme for plastic bottles and aluminium cans on 1 February 2024.[133]

The scheme applies to plastic bottles and aluminium and steel cans between 150mL and 3L. Glass containers and dairy products are excluded.

A deposit of €0.15 applies to containers from 150mL to 500mL inclusive and a deposit of €0.25 for containers over 500mL to 3L inclusive.

All retailers that sell "in scope" beverages are required to be part of the scheme.

Lithuania edit

Lithuania implemented container deposit legislation for single-use cans and bottles in February 2016. Lithuania's program is comprehensive and charges a deposit on nearly all types of beverage containers, including those made of plastic, metal, and glass 0.1 l to 3 l. The deposit is applicable to beer and beer cocktails; cider and other fermented beverages; mixed alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages; all types of water; juice and nectars (sold in glass, plastic, and metal packaging); and fruit wines and wine-product cocktails sold in plastic and metal packaging. Milk, wine, and spirits are exempt. The deposit is the same for all containers and is €0.10 per bottle/can, and most collection is done using reverse vending machines.[134]

Lithuania's deposit return system is operated by Užstato Sistemos Administratorius (USAD). Container return rates for plastic bottles were 34% before the deposit scheme, 74.3% at end of 2016, 91.9% at end of 2017, and 93% in 2018.[135][136]

Netherlands edit

Under the current deposit-return scheme, large polyethylene terephthalate (PET) 1 liter bottles and greater are subject to a 0.25 deposit, but only those for soft drinks and water. All other beverage types, such as medical drinks, wine, spirits, etc., are excluded. The system, which is operated by Stichting Retourverpakkingen NL, is mostly automated collection (89%) with only 11% of returns being done manually. Beer bottles carry a €0.10 deposit, and beer crates €1.50. In 2014, the Netherlands' deposit system recovered 95% of the containers covered by the program.[137]

On 24 April 2020, the State Secretary for Infrastructure and Water Management Stientje van Veldhoven announced that plastic bottles smaller than 1 liter will be subject to a 0.15 deposit, starting on 1 July 2021.[138] While Dutch environmental organisations acclaimed the decision,[139] it is believed that the extensive campaigning activities by athlete and environmentalist Merijn Tinga [140] made the extension of the deposit law happen.[141]

On 3 February 2021, Van Veldhoven furthermore announced that cans too will be subject to a 0.15 deposit, starting on 1 April 2023.[142] Originally it was meant to start on 31 December 2022,[143] but it was postponed due to lobbying of the supermarkets.

Norway edit

 
A Tomra reverse vending machine in Hammerfest, Norway

Automated recycling of bottles has been in use since the 1970s. Aluminium and steel beverage cans had a 5,60 kr surtax in Norway up until the end of the 20th century. In 1999, a container deposit legislation was passed, which also abolished this regulation. Today, these are the following container deposits in Norway:[citation needed]

  • Cans and plastic bottles up to 0.5 L: 2.00 kroner
  • Cans and plastic bottles over 0.5 L: 3 kr
  • Bottle crates are also reverse vended.
  • As of September 2018 container deposit legislation were removed from glass bottles.

In 2018 the rates were increased to 2 NOK (formerly 1 NOK) and 3 NOK (previously 2.50 NOK) due to inflation and the discontinuation of the 50-øre coin.[citation needed]

Infinitum AS (formerly Norsk Resirk A/S) is responsible for operating the national recycling scheme for non-refillable plastic bottles and beverage cans in Norway. The non-profit corporation was founded in 1999 and is owned by companies and organizations in the beverage industry and food trading.[144]

The Norwegian system works in such a way that the excise tax decreases as the returns increases,[145] meaning for example that 90 per cent returns for cans translates into a 90 per cent discount on the excise tax. This again allows drink products to be sold at lower prices.[citation needed]

In 2014, 95.4% of PET bottles and 96.6% of all drink cans in Norway were returned under the scheme.[citation needed]

Deposits on drink containers have a long history in Norway, starting with deposits on beer bottles in 1902. The deposit back then was 0.06 kr (3.30 kr in 2006 currency value). This deposit arrangement was later expanded to include soft drink bottles.[citation needed]

Up until 1 January 2001, the Vinmonopolet government wine and spirits monopoly chain had deposits on products made by the company itself, this did not include imported products.[citation needed]

All sellers of deposit marked drinking containers are required by law to accept returns of empty containers for cash. As of 2016, drink containers can be returned and deposits retrieved at over 15,000 establishments in Norway. The collection system is 95% automated (using reverse vending machines) and only 5% manual. Most reverse vending machines in Norway are manufactured by Tomra Systems ASA.[citation needed]

Portugal edit

In Portugal, fillers must ensure that their return quotas are met, which are 80% for beer, 65% for wine (with certain exceptions) and 30% for soft drinks. Retailers must sell refillable containers for all nonrefillables sold.: 94 

Spain edit

Spain has a voluntary deposit return scheme that is regulated by three laws:[146]

  1. Act 11/1997, 24 April, packaging and packaging waste ("Chapter IV: Deposit, devolution and return system integrated management systems for used packaging and packaging waste")
  2. Act 22/2011, 28 July, waste and contaminated soil (Article 31)
  3. Royal Decree 293/2018, 18 May, on reducing the consumption of plastic bags

Article 31.2.d of Act 21/2011 of 28 July establishes deposit systems that guarantee the return of the amounts deposited and the return of the product for reuse.[146][147]

In 2010, the overall return rate was calculated at 87%, while the reuse of beer containers was 57%.: 94 

Sweden edit

 
Deposit symbol of the old Swedish 50 öre 33-cl aluminium can

In Sweden, there are deposits on nearly all ready-to-serve beverages, including beer, soft drinks, cider, and bottled water. Since 2015, syrup producers can voluntarily join the deposit system. Since 2017 juice producers are also allowed to join.[148] The deposit values are as follows:

  • Metal: SEK 1
  • Plastic < 1 l: SEK 1
  • Plastic > 1 l: SEK 2
  • Glass 33 cl: SEK 0,60, an empty red bottle crate for 20 bottles has a SEK 22,40 deposit.
  • Glass 50 cl: SEK 0,90, an empty blue bottle crate for 15 bottles has a SEK 28,00 deposit.

AB Svenska Returpack (Pantamera [sv])[149] is responsible for the deposit system for aluminium cans and PET bottles.[150] The aluminium cans have had a deposit since 1984, and PET bottles since 1994. Svensk GlasÅtervinning AB is responsible for the deposit system of glass bottles.[151][152] A glass bottle recycling system was introduced in 1884 and the bottles were first standardized in 1885.[153]

Until 1998, all hard alcohol and wine bottles sold at Systembolaget — the government owned alcohol retail monopoly — were sold in standardised reusable bottles with deposit, but due to the deregulation of the Systembolaget's suppliers, the former sole supplier V&S Group dropped the deposit on their bottles due to the restricted bottle shapes giving V&S a disadvantage compared to the competitors. The bottles could be returned and deposit refunded until early 1999 at Systembolaget.[154]

The legislation regarding container deposit systems was updated so that from 1 January 2006, containers from other plastics and metals, e.g., steel cans, can be included in the deposit systems.[155][156] The law also makes it illegal in Sweden to sell consumption-ready beverages in containers that are not part of an authorized Swedish container deposit system, with the exception of beverages that mainly consist of dairy products or vegetable, fruit, or berry juice. However, private importation from (mainly Eastern European) countries without deposit occurs by vendors that thus compete with a somewhat lower customer price. The recycling of these contraband cans has not been seen as a problem, but Returpack made a campaign in 2010 offering 0.10 krona for each imported can (without deposit) to the benefit of WWF, retrieving 17 million cans. In 2011, a similar campaign was repeated, retrieving almost 18 million cans.[157]

The 1.5 L refillable PET bottle with a deposit of 4.00 kr has been discontinued, and has been replaced by the 1.5 L recycle PET bottle. The last day for returning bottles made by Spendrups for deposit was 30 June 2007,[158] and the last day for bottles made by Coca-Cola Sweden was 30 June 2008.[159]

Although Sweden is one of the leading countries in recycling of beverage containers, Returpack uses TV commercials to promote more recycling. Commercials have been made with well-known melodies sung, like "Guantanamera" and "Pata pata"—sounding like Returpack's slogan "panta mera" (i.e., "recycle more").[160]

In 2016, the overall recycling rate was 84.9% for both aluminium cans and PET bottles, which translates to 177 packages per person in Sweden.[161]

Switzerland and Liechtenstein edit

In Switzerland, there is a government ruling that 75% of containers must be returned, otherwise a deposit system may be introduced.[162] Currently a handful of beverages, including milk, sold in glass bottles are done so with a small deposit of 30 or 50 rappen paid by the purchaser, which is returned when the empty bottle is brought back to the store.[163]

According to the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, The IGORA-Genossenschaft aluminium recycling cooperative levies a prepaid disposal fee on aluminium beverage cans and uses the fees to finance recycling activities.[164]

United Kingdom edit

Until the turn of the 21st century, most British bottled beer was sold (whether in off-licences or pubs) in standard quart, pint, half-pint or third-pint (nip) bottles, although some brewers preferred their own distinctive designs. The standard deposit was 7pence (p) for a pint bottle and 5p for a half-pint. However, in the absence of legislation, and given the switch from pub to supermarket sales, and from Imperial to metric measures, the industry has now entirely abandoned refillable bottles.[citation needed]

Beer casks sold for the home or party consumption of draught beer are usually also loaned out against a deposit which may run to several tens of pounds.[citation needed]

England edit

In England, in January 2017, ministers were reported to be considering a 10p or 20p refundable deposit on plastic bottles and containers after Green Party co-leader Caroline Lucas had voiced her support of such a scheme at the end of 2016. As of February 2017, the idea of a plastic bottle levy was unlikely as the government rejected the deposit scheme proposal.[165] In March 2018, the UK government announced plans to introduce a deposit return scheme in England for drinks containers.[166]

Northern Ireland edit

As of June 2015, Northern Ireland had been considering a drinks deposit scheme, following the publication of a feasibility study for a deposit return scheme for drinks containers in Scotland.[167] It has yet to implement such a scheme.[citation needed]

Scotland edit

In Scotland, some Barr products in 750 mL glass bottles, had a 30p container deposit although this was discontinued in August 2015. Some Tesco stores have reverse vending machines which pay 12p per aluminium can (equivalent value in Tesco Clubcard Points). Furthermore, the landmark Climate Change (Scotland) Act 2009 passed by the Scottish Parliament contains within it powers for Scottish ministers to implement a national scheme.[168] As of April 2017, a Holyrood motion supporting the idea of a small deposit on all drinks containers was signed by 66 MSPs, including member from every party. In May 2015, the Association for the Protection of Rural Scotland (APRS) published Scottish polling which revealed overwhelming support for deposit-return. The figures showed that 78.8% of those who expressed a view supported this approach for Scotland, while just 8.5% opposed it.[169] Several companies, most notably large drinks corporations like Coca-Cola, are known to have lobbied against the introduction of a national deposit scheme.[170][171] But in February 2017, the drinks company unexpectedly announced its support for a deposit-return program in Scotland, and in a statement to the Independent, Coca-Cola UK stated: "We have embarked on a major review of our sustainable packaging strategy to understand what role we can play in unlocking the full potential of a circular economy in Great Britain."[172] On 5 September 2017, Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced that a deposit-system would be implemented as a means to tackle the rising tide of waste.[173] In March 2020 it was announced that the launch date would be delayed to July 2022.[174]

Wales edit

As of March 2018, Welsh ministers are working on a plan to introduce a deposit return scheme.[175]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ England announced the introduction of a container-deposit scheme in March 2018, it is unknown when it is to take effect.[101] Malta announced in August 2020 that it will implement its container deposite scheme towards the end of 2021.[102] The Netherlands already had container deposits for big PET bottles, and introduced deposits for small PET bottles on 1 July 2021. Most likely, the Dutch will also introduce deposits on cans in 2023.[103] Scotland announced in March 2020 that its container-deposit scheme will be launched in July 2022.[104]

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External links edit

  • Container Recycling Institute - Bottle Bill Resource Guide
  • Deposit System Administration
  • Dansk Retursystem A/S - operator of the Danish deposit and return system (in Danish and English)

container, deposit, legislation, bottle, deposit, redirects, here, seinfeld, episode, bottle, deposit, also, known, container, deposit, scheme, deposit, refund, system, scheme, deposit, return, system, bottle, bill, that, requires, collection, monetary, deposi. Bottle deposit redirects here For the Seinfeld episode see The Bottle Deposit Container deposit legislation also known as a container deposit scheme deposit refund system or scheme deposit return system or bottle bill is any law that requires the collection of a monetary deposit on beverage containers refillable or non refillable at the point of sale and or the payment of refund value to the consumers When the container is returned to an authorized redemption center or retailer in some jurisdictions the deposit is partly or fully refunded to the redeemer presumed to be the original purchaser It is a deposit refund system A deposit return machine for glass bottles plastic bottles and bottle crates left in a Dutch supermarketRefillable glass bottles collected and deposits refunded at a collection point in Bishkek Kyrgyzstan Deposit values from 50 tyiyn to 2 Kyrgyz som i e 2 5 U S cents for various bottle types are posted next to the sample bottles on a rack Governments may pass container deposit legislation for several reasons including to encourage recycling and complement existing curbside recycling programs to reduce energy and material usage for containers to reduce beverage container litter along highways in lakes and rivers and on other public or private properties where beverage container litter occurs a nominal deposit provides an economic incentive to clean it up which can be a significant source of income to some poor individuals and non profit civic organizations and to extend the usable lifetime of taxpayer funded landfills Deposits that are not redeemed are often kept by distributors or bottlers to cover the costs of the system including handling fees paid to retailers or redemption centers to collect sort and handle the containers or are escheated to the governmental entity involved to fund environmental programs Studies have shown that container deposit schemes are generally very successful in practice with return rates commonly reaching up to 90 or more 1 Contents 1 History 2 Laws by country 2 1 Overview 2 2 Africa 2 2 1 Kenya 2 2 2 South Africa 2 3 Americas 2 3 1 Canada 2 3 2 Peru 2 3 3 United States 2 4 Asia 2 4 1 Israel 2 4 2 Japan 2 4 3 South Korea 2 4 4 Taiwan 2 4 5 Turkey 2 5 Oceania 2 5 1 Australia 2 5 2 Fiji 2 5 3 New Zealand 2 6 Europe 2 6 1 Austria 2 6 2 Belgium 2 6 3 Croatia 2 6 4 Czech Republic 2 6 5 Denmark 2 6 6 Estonia 2 6 7 Finland 2 6 8 Germany 2 6 9 Hungary 2 6 10 Iceland 2 6 11 Ireland 2 6 12 Lithuania 2 6 13 Netherlands 2 6 14 Norway 2 6 15 Portugal 2 6 16 Spain 2 6 17 Sweden 2 6 18 Switzerland and Liechtenstein 2 6 19 United Kingdom 2 6 20 England 2 6 21 Northern Ireland 2 6 22 Scotland 2 6 22 1 Wales 3 See also 4 Explanatory notes 5 References 6 External linksHistory editA amp R Thwaites amp Co in Dublin Ireland announced in 1799 the provision of artificial soda water and that they paid 2 shillings a dozen for returned bottles Schweppes who were also in the business of artificially made mineral waters had a similar recycling policy from about 1800 without any legislation 2 Scottish bottled beverage companies also voluntarily introduced such a scheme to encourage the return of their bottles for reuse 3 In Sweden a standard system for deposits on bottles and recycling was established in 1884 eventually by law The popular demand for a deposit on aluminium cans to reduce littering led to legislation in 1984 citation needed British Columbia s legislated deposit return system enacted in 1970 is the oldest such program in North America 4 Laws by country editOverview edit Container deposit schemes by jurisdiction Country Implementation Aluminium Glass PET Beverages Covered Driver Ref nbsp Austria 1990 last amended 2025 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer and beer mixes alcoholic beverage mixes cider and other fermented beverages juices and nectars soft drinks waters wines and spirits Government 5 nbsp Barbados 1986 last amended 2019 nbsp nbsp nbsp Carbonated and non carbonated soft drinks mineral and soda water beer and malt beverages Government 6 nbsp Belarus TBA nbsp nbsp nbsp All beverages except dairy based products Government 7 nbsp Belgium 1993 nbsp nbsp nbsp Refillable beer containers Government 8 nbsp Croatia 2005 last amended 2020 nbsp nbsp nbsp Containers gt 200mL juices water beer wine hard liquor Containers lt 200mL milk and dairy products Government 9 nbsp Denmark 1981 last amended 2020 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer carbonated and uncarbonated soft drinks energy drinks fermented drink products excluding wine and spirits cider alcoholic and non alcoholic mixer products mineral water juice Industry 1922 10 Government 1981 11 12 nbsp Ecuador 2012 nbsp nbsp nbsp Alcoholic non alcoholic carbonated and non carbonated beverages Government 13 nbsp Estonia 2005 nbsp nbsp nbsp Soft drinks water beer cider juice nectars and juice concentrate low ethanol alcoholic beverages 6 alcohol by volume Government 14 nbsp Fiji TBA nbsp nbsp nbsp TBA Government 15 nbsp Finland 1996 cans 2008 PET 2012 glass nbsp nbsp nbsp Almost all soft drinks water beer cider long drinks sport drinks juice liquor spirits wine sold by Alko Government or Manufacturer 16 nbsp Germany 2003 last amended 2019 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer soft drinks carbonated and non carbonated water mixed alcoholic drinks juice in PET bottles expected to be implemented January 2022 Manufacturer 17 nbsp Iceland 1989 nbsp nbsp nbsp All ready to drink beverages wine and liquor Government 18 nbsp Ireland 2024 nbsp nbsp nbsp All beverages except dairy products Government 19 20 nbsp Israel 2001 last amended 2010 nbsp nbsp nbsp All containers between 100mL and 5L Government 21 nbsp Jamaica 2021 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 22 23 nbsp Latvia 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp Water mineral water lemonade energy drinks tea juices and nectars beer wine coolers and mixed drinks with less than 6 alcohol content Government 24 nbsp Lithuania 2016 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer and beer cocktails cider and perry fruit wine and fruit wine based drinks soft drinks water kvass juices and nectar Government 25 nbsp Luxemburg 2023 nbsp nbsp nbsp All beverages Government 26 nbsp Kiribati 2005 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer soft drinks water Government 27 nbsp Malta 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp Water carbonated and non carbonated soft drinks ciders beers ready to drink coffee and dilutables Manufacturer 28 nbsp Micronesia Kosrae 1991 last amended in 2007 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 29 nbsp India Maharashtra 2018 last amended 2019 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 30 nbsp Netherlands 2004 last amended 2021 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer water soft drinks system is opt in for fruit juice producers Government 31 32 nbsp Norway 1997 last amended 1999 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 33 nbsp Palau 2011 nbsp nbsp nbsp Beer and ales mixed wine and spirits tea and coffee based drinks soda non carbonated water all non alcoholic drinks Government 34 nbsp Poland 2025 nbsp nbsp nbsp TBA Government 35 nbsp Romania 2023 nbsp nbsp nbsp All beverages except milk in single use containers up to 3 liters Government 36 nbsp Scotland 2025 nbsp nbsp nbsp TBA Government 37 nbsp Seychelles 2007 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 38 nbsp Singapore 2025 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 39 nbsp Slovakia 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp Water beer juices wine Government 40 41 nbsp South Korea 1985 last amended 2003 nbsp nbsp nbsp Alcoholic drinks such as soju and beer carbonated soft drinks Government 42 nbsp Sweden 1982 last amended 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp All ready to drink beverages excluding dairy and juices Government 43 44 45 46 nbsp Switzerland 2001 nbsp nbsp nbsp All beverages in refillable containers one way soft drinks beer and mineral water Government 47 nbsp Turkey 2022 nbsp nbsp nbsp Tea and coffee carbonated soft drinks energy drinks cow milk fruit and vegetable juices water sparkling and non sparkling sports drinks alcoholic beverages Government 48 nbsp United Kingdom 2025 nbsp nbsp nbsp Unknown Government 49 50 Africa edit Kenya edit By 2005 the beverage industry in Kenya applied a deposit refund system for glass bottles that had proven to be popular amongst wholesalers retailers and consumers alike to participate in not just in Nairobi but throughout the country At the time there was a deposit of 10 Kenyan shillings on soft drink bottles and 25 shillings on beer bottles 51 South Africa edit Although there is no formalised deposit return scheme for packaging or plastics in South Africa individual companies such as Coca Cola have implemented deposit return schemes for their own products with success 52 Manufacturers introduced this system without involvement of the government around 1948 Approximately 75 of beer containers 45 of soft drink containers and some wine and spirits bottles participate in the scheme 94 South Africa was noted in 2012 as one of the few countries that included plastic bottles in its schemes 1 Aside from bottles similar deposit refund schemes exist in South Africa for batteries cars and tyres 53 Americas edit nbsp Container deposit legislation in North America Container deposits on most bottles and cans Container deposits only on beer alcoholic beverage containers Container deposits discontinued No container depositsBy 1998 there were voluntary deposit refund schemes for glass containers in Barbados Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Ecuador Jamaica Mexico and Venezuela 54 Canada edit See also Recycling in Canada In 1970 British Columbia became the first Canadian province to establish a mandatory deposit return system for soft drinks and beer containers citation needed As of 2021 nearly all provinces and territories in Canada have followed suit the territory of Nunavut is the only jurisdiction in Canada that has yet to implement some sort of deposit refund system In Ontario only containers of alcoholic beverages come with deposits in Manitoba only beer containers participate in the deposit scheme 55 Deposits range from CAD 0 05 to CAD 0 40 per unit depending on the material and size of the container and whether the container contains an alcoholic or non alcoholic beverage citation needed Below is a brief summary of each program 56 British Columbia While the original program covered only carbonated soft drinks and beer the deposit legislation expanded to include any ready to serve beverage sold in a container that is sealed by its manufacturer e g bottled water juice new age drinks and alcohol There are currently two stewardship agencies in BC that carry out deposit refund obligations on behalf of beverage producers Encorp Pacific for non alcoholic beverages wine spirits some ciders and coolers and some import beer and Brewers Distributor Ltd BDL for domestic coolers beers and ciders In 2017 BC s program recovered over 1 billion containers for an overall return rate of 75 8 57 Bottle deposit on single use beverage containers have increased to CDN 0 10 from CDN 0 05 in November 2019 58 As of February 2022 milk and milk substitute containers are also refundable 59 Alberta All beverage containers glass bottles metal cans Tetra Paks gable top cartons bags in boxes plastic bottles and jugs drink pouches including milk containers Alberta was the first jurisdiction in North America to accept and charge a deposit on milk containers in June 2009 are charged deposits at the point of sale 10 for containers 1 L or less and 25 for containers larger than 1 L Containers can be dropped off at depots and are picked up by the Alberta Beverage Container Recycling Corporation In 2014 over 2 billion beverage containers were returned to Alberta depots for an overall return rate of 83 citation needed Saskatchewan Established in 1988 Saskatchewan s deposit return program applies to all ready to serve beverage containers except those for meal replacements or dietary supplements SARCAN began taking milk and milk substitutes on April 1 2017 SARCAN Recycling is responsible for administering the program and operates under contract to the Saskatchewan Ministry of Environment In fiscal 2014 2015 a total of 405 6 million beverage containers were returned to SARCAN recycling depots for an overall container return rate of 87 citation needed Manitoba Manitoba s program was implemented in 2010 and is limited to beer containers which are charged a deposit of CAD 0 10 or 0 20 depending on the size Other containers except milk are charged a non refundable 0 02 per unit levy Container Recycling Fee and can be recycled in municipal curbside recycling programs citation needed Ontario The Ontario Deposit Return Program ODRP which came into force in February 2007 is a voluntary program implemented by the provincial government that covers wine spirits and imported beer containers plastics metal bimetal glass gable top Tetra Pak bag in box containers Because there is no law mandating that wine and spirits be placed on deposit they may be added to municipal blue box programs voluntarily Refillable and non refillable beer containers are collected through a separate program administered and operated by Brewers Retail Inc The Beer Store Alcoholic beverage containers as well as any associated packaging can be returned to 443 beer store locations 113 breweries beer containers only 141 retail partner stores 63 LCBO northern agency stores 4 additional LCBO stores and 115 empty bottle dealers small independent depots contracted in more remote locations where beer retailers are not available for a total of 879 redemption locations TBS trucks collect these empty containers and back haul them to various distribution centres where recyclables are sent to a processing facility for sorting baling and shipping to market Refillable bottles are sent back to the brewers for washing and refill Containers returned through Ontario s deposit return system showed a total recycling rate of 89 for 2014 2015 while refillable beer bottles were returned at a rate of 98 citation needed nbsp A reverse vending machine in a Montreal grocery store Quebec Quebec s deposit return system was established in 1984 and covers beer and carbonated soft drink containers Deposits range from CAD 0 05 to 0 20 depending on the size material and content of the container Boissons Gazeuses Environnement BGE administers the program for non refillable soft drink containers on behalf of industry while Recyc Quebec oversees the beer container collection program In 2014 the recycling rate for containers recovered via the deposit return system was 78 includes data for refillable bottles citation needed New Brunswick This program was created in 1992 and covers all ready to drink non refillable beverage containers 5 L and under including soft drinks beer wine spirits flavoured waters fruit juices vegetable juices and low alcohol drinks Containers for milk and milk products and substitutes as well as processed apple cider are exempt Encorp Atlantic Inc is the stewardship agency responsible for managing the collection transportation and partial processing of non alcoholic beverage containers on behalf of brand owners and New Brunswick Liquor NB Liquor is responsible for the collection of alcoholic beverage containers Program oversight is the responsibility of the Department of Environment New Brunswick s deposit return program is somewhat unique in that it operates under a half back model where only half of the original deposit is refunded to the consumer when a container is returned for recycling The unrefunded portion of the deposit is used to cover the costs of administering the program and part of it also goes towards the province s Environmental Trust Fund which is used for environmental conservation and other provincial initiatives aimed at reducing waste In 2014 New Brunswick s recycling rate for non refillable containers was 73 citation needed Newfoundland and Labrador In 1996 the provincial government established The Multi Materials Stewardship Board MMSB as a self funded crown agency Intended to develop implement and manage waste diversion programs for various specific waste streams province wide 60 The following year MMSB began a licensing and standardization framework for recycling depots Branded as Green Depot all locations are independently owned and operated enterprises 61 There are 55 Green Depots 62 province wide accepting non refillable ready to serve beverage containers for refund excluding those for milk amp milk alternatives infant formula meal replacement beverage concentrates distilled water bottles and containers over 5 liters Refillable glass beer bottles are not included in MMSB s used beverage container program as local brewers regulate refillable beer bottle return Brewers agents breweries and most convenience stores selling beer will accept back these bottles for store credit or sometimes cash at 10 per bottle being a full return of the initial deposit A limited number of Green Depots do accept back refillable glass beer bottles for a 5 return depending on their location Non refillable deposits sit in two categories with containers for non alcoholic drinks beer miniature spirit bottles under 50ml and spirits in tetra pak gable top and pouch type containers being charged an 8 deposit and refunding 5 Containers for spirits primarily in larger glass and plastic bottles charge a deposit of 20 and refund at 10 63 Since 1997 over 3 37 billion containers have been diverted from landfill through Newfoundland and Labrador Green Depots 62 Additionally since 2013 Hebert s Recycling inc has been collecting and processing all recyclable containers from Green Depot locations using its patented Enviopactor system of truck mounted recycling compactors to streamline recycling shipments from depots to centralized facilities 62 Nova Scotia Launched on 1 April 1996 Nova Scotia s deposit return program applies to all ready to drink beverage containers excluding milk milk products soya milk and rice beverages Other containers that are exempt from the program are certain meal replacements formulated liquid diets foods for very low energy diets thickened juices baby formulas concentrates and non alcoholic beverages in containers of 5 L or more The organization responsible for managing the program is DivertNS formerly the Resource Recovery Fund Board Inc Like New Brunswick s program Nova Scotia s deposit return system is based on a half back model where only half of the original deposit paid per container is refunded to the consumer The non refundable portion of the deposit is used as revenue by DivertNS to help pay for program costs In 2014 the program collected 334 million non refillable beverage containers for a recycling rate of 84 citation needed Prince Edward Island The province s deposit return system was launched on 3 May 2008 as a replacement to a law that had prohibited the sale of non refillable soft drink containers The program is overseen and administered by the Department of Environment Energy and Forestry and covers all ready to drink beverage containers up to 5 L except those used for dairy products milk substitutes or nutritional supplements Similar to the other Atlantic provinces PEI s deposit return system is based on a half back model where only 50 of the original deposit paid is refunded to the consumer when he she returns the empty container to a depot In 2014 2015 PEI had a non refillable beverage container recycling rate of 80 and a total container recycling rate of 82 citation needed Yukon Introduced in 1992 Yukon s deposit return program covers all ready to drink beverage containers glass plastic steel aluminium and Tetra Pak excluding those containing milk and milk substitutes The program is managed by the Department of Community Services and requires consumers to pay a surcharge on the purchase of certain beverage containers which includes a refundable deposit and a non refundable recycling fund fee RFF Upon return of the empty container to a depot or processor a portion of the surcharge the refundable deposit is refunded to the consumer while the non refundable RFF is kept by the retailer and remitted to the territorial Recycling Fund where unredeemed deposits also go In 2014 Yukon had a non refillable recycling rate of 82 In May 2016 the Yukon government announced changes to the Beverage Container Regulation These changes which were expected to be implemented 1 August 2017 will affect the surcharges and refunds applicable to beverage containers including milk and milk substitutes and will simplify the regulation Once the territory s new regulations kick in all beverage containers will fall into two categories 1 750 ml and less including all milk amp milk substitutes surcharge 10 cents refund 5 cents and 2 750 ml and more surcharge 35 cents refund 25 cents citation needed Northwest Territories Launched on 1 November 2005 Northwest Territories deposit return program covers all ready to serve beverage containers made of glass plastics aluminium bi metal and mixed materials including juice milk and liquid milk products added February 2010 soda water beer wine liquor and other alcoholic beverages Excluded from the program are containers for infant formula containers for milk and liquid milk products smaller than 30 ml and powder milk The Department of Environment and Natural Resources DNR is responsible for administering the program Similar to Yukon s program the total surcharge per container includes a refundable deposit and a non refundable handling fee Whereas the refundable deposit is returned to the consumer when they return the beverage container to a depot the non refundable handing fee is put into the Environment Fund and is used to help cover program costs In fiscal 2014 approximately 26 million beverage containers were returned for reuse or recycling translating into an overall recycling rate of 89 citation needed Peru edit Peru has a deposit on some bottles of 620 millilitres ml 94 United States edit Main article Container deposit legislation in the United States There are currently 10 states in the United States with the container deposit legislation California Enacted in 1981 and operated by CalRecycle California s bottle bill charges a 5 refundable deposit on containers less than 24 US fluid ounces 710 ml and 10 for containers 24 US fluid ounces 710 ml or greater citation needed Connecticut Connecticut s bottle bill was introduced in 1980 but was expanded in 2009 to include bottled water The deposit is the same for all container types and is 5 citation needed Hawaii Hawaii s bottle bill has been in place since 2005 and is government operated A refundable deposit of 5 is charged on all plastic PET HDPE metal bi metal and glass beverage containers 2 l or less except for milk and dairy products In 2015 the system achieved a total return rate of 68 citation needed Iowa Introduced in 1979 64 The deposit is uniform across beverage categories and is currently 5 Unredeemed funds are kept by beverage distributors and it has been found to be highly profitable to them 65 Maine Established in 1978 after a ballot initiative 66 Maine s bottle bill charges a 5 deposit on plastic metal and glass containers and 15 for most liquor and wine bottles 67 Massachusetts The state s bottle bill was effective as of January 17 1983 68 The deposit levied is 5 citation needed Michigan Implemented in 1978 Michigan s bottle bill charges a 10 deposit on plastic metal glass and paper containers less than 1 gallon 69 New York New York s bottle bill has been in place since January 12 1983 70 New York charges a 5 deposit on plastic metal and glass containers 3 78 l or less citation needed Oregon The Oregon Bottle Bill enacted in 1972 was the first container deposit legislation in the United States The deposit refund value is uniformly 10 per applicable container 71 The deposit is held by the beverage industry cooperative and they keep all the unclaimed deposit 65 Vermont Implemented in 1973 Vermont s bottle bill charges a 5 deposit on plastic metal and glass beer wine coolers and other malt beverages soft drinks and other carbonated beverage containers Most liquor and spirits bottles are charged a deposit of 15 citation needed States that formerly had can deposit regulation Delaware 5 introduced 1982 abolished 2009 replaced by Universal Recycling law citation needed Asia edit Israel edit In Israel there is a 0 30 shekel deposit on beverage containers over 100 mL and under 5 L except for dairy products The system is operated by the ELA Recycling Corporation a private non profit organization owned by Israel s beverage manufacturers Businesses are required to accept bottles if they sold them or if they are over 28 square meters and sell beverages from the same manufacturer or importer Businesses are not required to accept more than 50 bottles per customer per day The deposit was initially 0 25 but was raised shortly after the 0 05 coin was discontinued 72 In 2015 the system achieved a total return rate of 77 73 Most 500 ml beer bottles local brands such as Goldstar and Maccabee plus certain imported ones like Carlsberg and Tuborg have a deposit of 1 20 and are willingly accepted even by smaller businesses plastic water bottles glass wine bottles and soda cans are mostly accepted by larger supermarket chains some of which possess reverse vending machines 74 In order to collect more products with its large storage area Aco Recycling introduced G 1 Smart Reverse Vending Machines with 3 Shredder for Asofta official operator for deposit scheme in Israel Japan edit The container deposit legislation as a monetary approach to the garbage recycling problem has never caught on in Japan However under increasingly ever stricter sorting rules announced by each town or city garbage is meticulously sorted into kitchen garbage newspapers books metal cans washed plastic bottles rinsed garden weeds etc in each neighborhood for pickup by collection cars usually on different days notified by the local government 75 South Korea edit By 1997 South Korea had introduced a deposit refund system for beverage containers 54 Taiwan edit By 1997 Taiwan had introduced a deposit refund scheme for PET soft drink bottles 54 Turkey edit In Turkey a recycling pilot project was launched in 2018 where plastic bottles and cans could be deposited at vending machines at three Istanbul Metro stations in return for credit on a public transport ticket card 76 In 2021 the Turkish government decided to introduce deposit return system DRS by January 1 2022 to protect Turkey s 8 000 kilometer coastline The upcoming deposit refund scheme is expected to help reduce different types of litter such as land and marine litter and prohibit packaging waste from damaging landfills within the country One of the main reasons the Turkish government has implemented DRS is that it will increase the recycling of plastic and glass containers by 250 percent and help turn the 811 000 tons of glass and plastic containers thrown into landfills each year into secondary raw materials 77 Oceania edit Australia edit Main article Container deposit legislation in Australia nbsp Reverse container vending machine in Kooringal New South Wales nbsp CDL CDS status in Australian states and territories Scheme in effect Planned scheme Tasmania 2024 In the days when bottles were washed and re used drinks manufacturers paid for the return of their proprietary containers but with the advent of single use containers great savings were possible leaving their disposal as the consumer s responsibility While a national scheme has been repeatedly delayed largely due to threats from the beverage industry of multi million dollar advertisements against politicians who support it and earlier disagreements between states 78 there has been a growing momentum of state based operated container deposit schemes CDS All states have implemented or will introduce a state based container deposit scheme operating by 2023 with Victoria the final jurisdiction to support such a scheme 79 With 8 billion beverage containers landfilled or littered every year in Australia proponents argue that it is the most effective method to reduce such litter and improve recycling above that achieved by kerbside It also has many co benefits such as funds for charities and several thousand new jobs that cannot be achieved by other approaches 80 The state of South Australia charges a refundable deposit of AUD 10 cents per drinks carton can or bottle only containers marked as eligible for refund does not include wine amp spirits bottles milk cartons or concentrated and or vegetable juice intended to be diluted before consumption This has been in place since 1977 81 The overall return rate is 79 9 82 Northern Territory introduced a container deposit scheme in 2012 A 10 cent AUD refundable deposit is charged on all beverage containers with the exception of unflavoured milk soy milk cordial bottles undiluted concentrated fruit vegetable juice intended to be diluted before consumption and still or sparkling wine in glass bottles Unredeemed deposits remain with the producer filler In 2015 2016 the system achieved a total return rate of 54 83 The state of New South Wales the most populated state with 7 5 million residents announced that it would be adopting a 10 cent AUD deposit scheme which commenced on 1 December 2017 84 The program has achieved a return rate of 69 85 On 22 July 2016 the Queensland government announced that the state would introduce a container deposit scheme which commenced on 1 November 2018 86 A 10 cent AUD refund is provided for empty drink containers between 150 ml and 3 l 87 The state of Western Australia has announced the start date of a state based scheme commencing in 2020 88 The scheme will apply to certain empty drink containers ranging in size from 150 ml to 3 L and will exclude domestically consumed drink containers such as wine and spirit bottles milk and juice containers The amount of the deposit refund will be AUD 10 cents 89 Tasmania has as of June 2019 announced it will have a scheme in place by 2024 citation needed Victoria announced it would introduce a scheme which commenced on 1 November 2023 as part of its updated recycling and waste management policies 90 91 Fiji edit The United Nations Development Programme had funded a feasibility study to look at the possibility of establishing a deposit return system in Fiji building on the experience gained from their successful projects in Kiribati and the Federated States of Micronesia 92 In 2011 the Fijian Government approved the Environment Management Waste Disposal and Recycling Amendment Regulations 2011 and the Environment Management Container Deposit Regulations 2011 93 The Regulations provide the legal framework for the introduction of a container deposit and refund system allowing beverage producers and importers to adjust pricing and accommodate deposits 94 The Regulations will also allow the Department of Environment to register and establish the Managing Agency that will administer Fiji s container deposit system and establish a revolving fund account to receive all deposits paid by producers for all beverages sold 95 No further details are available 96 New Zealand edit Single use containers were increasingly introduced between the 1950s 97 and 1980s 98 99 New Zealand had no container deposit legislation until 2008 when the Waste Minimisation Act 2008 passed into law The Act has provision for product stewardship of which container deposit legislation is the most familiar type As of 2010 update there is no widespread deposits available on containers with some beer bottles being a notable exception The Ministry for the Environment is working on a container return scheme which may be introduced in about 2023 100 Europe edit nbsp Container deposit legislation in Europe note 1 Container deposits on PET bottles and cans Container deposits on PET bottles but not on cans Planned introduction of container deposits on PET bottles and cans No container deposits on PET bottles and cansAustria edit Austria has a container deposit system for refillable PET bottles since 1990 In 2022 Austria announced a 25 cent deposit that will be levied on all plastic bottles from 100ml up to three litres and aluminium cans in 2025 according to the Climate Protection Ministry 105 Belgium edit Smaller beer bottles 250 or 330 mL carry a 0 10 deposit and larger ones 750 mL or 1 L a 0 20 one Some fruit juice bottles such as those sold by Oxfam Wereldwinkels Magasins du Monde carry a 0 30 deposit Some hard plastic milk and orange juice bottles such as those sold by Delhaize carry a 0 20 deposit In April 2019 the Brussels Capital Region started a project to test out an expansion of the system to cans which hold a 0 05 deposit 106 After the 2019 Belgian regional elections the new Brussels regional government decided to introduce the deposit system for cans as well as for plastic bottles 107 Croatia edit Since 2006 a refundable deposit of 0 50 kn has been levied on non refillable containers except dairy products with minimum volume of 200 mL 7 0 imp fl oz 6 8 US fl oz Retailers over 200 m2 2 200 sq ft are obliged to take back containers Collection is mostly manual although some collection occurs with reverse vending machines Retailers must sort containers by material type PET bottles aluminium steel cans and glass bottles The scheme is government operated and there is a collection target of 95 In 2015 the scheme recovered up to 90 of all non refillable containers placed on the Croatian market 108 Czech Republic edit In the Czech Republic most beer is sold in returnable glass bottles that carry a CZK 3 deposit These bottles are collected by shops and supermarkets Reverse vending machines have mostly replaced human staff There is also a CZK 100 deposit on plastic beer crates with a 20 bottle capacity Most reverse vending machines accept an entire crate full of empty bottles returning CZK 160 There is no deposit on other containers citation needed Denmark edit In Denmark the first national deposit return system was introduced in 1922 when the Danish breweries agreed on a standardized glass bottle for beer and carbonized drinks due to the limited resources available during and in the aftermath of World War I 109 110 In 1991 and 1993 this was expanded to also include plastic bottles Aluminium beverage cans were forbidden from 1982 to 2002 but this ban was found to violate European Union law and to get into compliance Denmark introduced new legislation in 2002 extending the deposit scheme to also cover aluminium cans 109 111 The law covers beer alcohol content gt 0 5 by volume carbonated soft drinks alcohol content 0 0 5 energy drinks mineral water iced tea ready to drink beverages and mixer products alcohol content 0 5 10 juice and uncarbonated soft drinks were added to the deposit scheme in 2019 2020 Excluded from the scheme are wine and spirits alcohol content gt 10 products containing milk and containers larger than 20 liters 111 112 113 The deposit levels are as follows 114 Disposable aluminium and glass containers under 1 L and refillable glass bottles under 0 5 L labelled Pant A 1 DKK Disposable and refillable plastic containers under 1 L labelled Pant B 1 5 DKK Metal and plastic containers equal to or greater than 1 L or refillable glass bottles over 0 5 L labelled Pant C 3 DKK The deposit system operator is Dansk Retursystem A S a private non profit organization Most collection 95 is done automatically using reverse vending machines but some 5 is done manually 115 In 2019 the system achieved a total return rate of 92 116 Estonia edit nbsp Deposit symbol in Estonia B on a 1 5 L bottle In Estonia there is a universal deposit and recycling system since 2005 for one time and refillable containers This includes soft drinks water beer cider juice juice concentrates nectars and low ethanol alcoholic beverages up to 6 volume The deposit is 0 10 on most metal plastic and glass beverage containers It does not include strong alcoholic beverages such as wine or vodka syrup bottles glass jars or Tetra Paks 117 Since 2019 the system has been set to also accept some out of system bottles within accepted categories though people will not receive a deposit for those The system is operated by Eesti Pandipakend OU which is a producer responsibility organization representing the Estonian Association of Brewers the Association of Producers of Soft Drinks the Association of Importers of Soft Drinks and Beer and the Estonian Retailers Association citation needed In 2015 90 of all PET bottles 70 of all aluminium cans and 87 of all glass bottles sold in Estonia were returned for recycling and or reuse The overall return rate was 82 3 118 Finland edit Deposit system was first introduced to Finland in 1952 along with summer Olympic Games which brought Coca Cola to the country in glass bottles In the 1980s some re usable and durable plastic bottles were included in the deposit system Deposits were introduced on aluminium cans in 1996 on PET bottles in 2008 and on recycled glass bottles in 2012 Almost all soft drinks are covered by the program in addition to water beer cider long drinks sport drinks juice and liquor spirits wine sold by Alko Milk and other products packed in liquid packaging board are exempt The system is administered by Suomen palautuspakkaus Oy abbr Palpa which is a private consortium of beverage importers and manufacturers In 2016 aluminium cans were recovered at a rate of 96 PET bottles 92 and one way glass 88 119 The deposit values for these containers are as follows 73 Plastic lt 0 35 L 0 10 Plastic 0 35 1 L 0 20 Plastic gt 1 L 0 40 Metal 0 15 Glass 0 10The scheme is in technical sense voluntary and Palpa does not hold a legal monopoly for container deposits systems Lidl has its own levy system for Lidl bottles Those beverage containers that do not belong to a container deposit system are levied an excise tax of 0 51 L regardless of the container size 120 The tax is so high that essentially all beverage manufacturers and importers opt to join the Palpa system instead of paying the excise tax 121 Germany edit nbsp Reverse vending machine in an Aldi supermarket in Germany In Germany the deposit legislation covers plastic aluminium and glass containers for water beer mixed drinks containing beer carbonated and non carbonated soft drinks including fruit juices as well as mixed alcoholic drinks Excluded from the programme are containers for milk products wine spirits liquors and certain dietary drinks Also excluded are containers smaller than 100 mL and larger than 3 L 122 Germany was noted in 2012 as one of the few countries that included plastic bottles in its schemes 1 There is separate legislation known as Einwegpfand or single use deposit for non reusable containers mostly thin plastic bottles and aluminium cans distinct from Mehrwegpfand reusable deposit for reusable containers mostly glass and thicker plastic 123 Legislation for an Einwegpfand single use deposit system was created in 2002 and came into force on 1 January 2003 124 However its implementation was fought by lobby groups of German bottling industry and retailers This fight also included trials at the Federal Administrative Court of Germany and the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany but all trials were won by the German federal government 125 The deposit charge for Einwegpfand containers is required to be relatively high As of October 2016 the standard deposit for these is 0 25 By comparison the deposit for reusable containers mostly glass bottles is usually between 8 and 15 cents The usual rates are locally 0 02 for some wine bottles 0 08 for beer bottles up to 0 5 L and 0 15 for beer bottles with flip top closures beer bottles over 0 5 L and other bottles mostly water and soft drinks lesser fruit drinks milk cream yoghurt Some bottles have an even higher deposit Bottle crates have a deposit of 1 50 126 The reasoning behind the price discrepancy was to keep environmentally harmful plastics from ending up as litter or in the regular garbage system 127 It was also meant to make non reusable beverage containers more expensive and thus less attractive 127 nbsp German plastic bottle with an Einwegpfand signRetailers are only obliged to take back the material fractions that they sell The deposit for refillable bottles is not defined by law Germany s collection system is 80 automated and 20 manual Most supermarkets in Germany have a reverse vending machine that is designed to be used by customers and which scans Pfand returns and prints a receipt for the total value of the refund which can be exchanged for cash or put towards the cost of future purchases 128 Supermarkets near the Danish border have established a scheme where Scandinavian residents are exempt from Pfand by signing an Export declaration and providing that cans are exported within 24 hours and the contents are not consumed within Germany 129 The system has successfully encouraged the recycling of Einwegpfand containers Between 97 and 99 of non reusable bottles are returned and recycling rates for cans are around 99 127 On the other hand the percentage of containers being sold that are reusable has actually decreased from about 80 to below 50 since the system was established 127 Since manufacturers keep the deposit on any unreturned containers they are effectively incentivized to produce Einwegpfand containers which yield a higher profit if they are not returned One estimate suggests they have earned 3bn on unreturned bottles since the system was introduced 127 At any given time an estimated 2 billion beer bottles are in circulation in Germany each of which sees an average of 36 reuses 130 Hungary edit In Hungary beer wine and standardized liquor bottles carry a deposit on them which was liberalized in the recent past Beer bottles have 25 forints on them but for wine glasses and for liquor bottles the sum is decided by the trader which people can exploit by buying a drink in a certain retailer and bringing the bottle back to its rival who have a bigger deposit on it PET bottles and metal beverage containers are taken back only by some super and hypermarkets such as Lidl Auchan Tesco Interspar They all use reverse vending machines to collect them for bottles and in most places for the PET bottles they use a Wincor Nixdorf or a Tomra machine while ALU cans are collected by the Hungarian ALU press machine Its advantage is that it accepts flattened or pressed cans as well and it crushes them with a pressing machine thus improving the storage capacity of the machine The containers prices 2 forints ALU can and 1 forint PET bottle do not widely motivate people to revend these containers citation needed Iceland edit Iceland has had a deposit system on a national scale for a wide range of containers plastic aluminium and glass since 1989 131 All ready to drink beverages wine and liquor are included in the program Milk milk products and juice extracts are excluded The deposit is the same for all bottles and cans ISK 18 132 The recycling rate per product is approximately 90 aluminium 87 PET Glass is not recycled citation needed Ireland edit Ireland introduced a Deposit Return Scheme for plastic bottles and aluminium cans on 1 February 2024 133 The scheme applies to plastic bottles and aluminium and steel cans between 150mL and 3L Glass containers and dairy products are excluded A deposit of 0 15 applies to containers from 150mL to 500mL inclusive and a deposit of 0 25 for containers over 500mL to 3L inclusive All retailers that sell in scope beverages are required to be part of the scheme Lithuania edit Lithuania implemented container deposit legislation for single use cans and bottles in February 2016 Lithuania s program is comprehensive and charges a deposit on nearly all types of beverage containers including those made of plastic metal and glass 0 1 l to 3 l The deposit is applicable to beer and beer cocktails cider and other fermented beverages mixed alcoholic and non alcoholic beverages all types of water juice and nectars sold in glass plastic and metal packaging and fruit wines and wine product cocktails sold in plastic and metal packaging Milk wine and spirits are exempt The deposit is the same for all containers and is 0 10 per bottle can and most collection is done using reverse vending machines 134 Lithuania s deposit return system is operated by Uzstato Sistemos Administratorius USAD Container return rates for plastic bottles were 34 before the deposit scheme 74 3 at end of 2016 91 9 at end of 2017 and 93 in 2018 135 136 Netherlands edit See also Recycling in the Netherlands Under the current deposit return scheme large polyethylene terephthalate PET 1 liter bottles and greater are subject to a 0 25 deposit but only those for soft drinks and water All other beverage types such as medical drinks wine spirits etc are excluded The system which is operated by Stichting Retourverpakkingen NL is mostly automated collection 89 with only 11 of returns being done manually Beer bottles carry a 0 10 deposit and beer crates 1 50 In 2014 the Netherlands deposit system recovered 95 of the containers covered by the program 137 On 24 April 2020 the State Secretary for Infrastructure and Water Management Stientje van Veldhoven announced that plastic bottles smaller than 1 liter will be subject to a 0 15 deposit starting on 1 July 2021 138 While Dutch environmental organisations acclaimed the decision 139 it is believed that the extensive campaigning activities by athlete and environmentalist Merijn Tinga 140 made the extension of the deposit law happen 141 On 3 February 2021 Van Veldhoven furthermore announced that cans too will be subject to a 0 15 deposit starting on 1 April 2023 142 Originally it was meant to start on 31 December 2022 143 but it was postponed due to lobbying of the supermarkets Norway edit nbsp A Tomra reverse vending machine in Hammerfest NorwayAutomated recycling of bottles has been in use since the 1970s Aluminium and steel beverage cans had a 5 60 kr surtax in Norway up until the end of the 20th century In 1999 a container deposit legislation was passed which also abolished this regulation Today these are the following container deposits in Norway citation needed Cans and plastic bottles up to 0 5 L 2 00 kroner Cans and plastic bottles over 0 5 L 3 kr Bottle crates are also reverse vended As of September 2018 container deposit legislation were removed from glass bottles In 2018 the rates were increased to 2 NOK formerly 1 NOK and 3 NOK previously 2 50 NOK due to inflation and the discontinuation of the 50 ore coin citation needed Infinitum AS formerly Norsk Resirk A S is responsible for operating the national recycling scheme for non refillable plastic bottles and beverage cans in Norway The non profit corporation was founded in 1999 and is owned by companies and organizations in the beverage industry and food trading 144 The Norwegian system works in such a way that the excise tax decreases as the returns increases 145 meaning for example that 90 per cent returns for cans translates into a 90 per cent discount on the excise tax This again allows drink products to be sold at lower prices citation needed In 2014 95 4 of PET bottles and 96 6 of all drink cans in Norway were returned under the scheme citation needed Deposits on drink containers have a long history in Norway starting with deposits on beer bottles in 1902 The deposit back then was 0 06 kr 3 30 kr in 2006 currency value This deposit arrangement was later expanded to include soft drink bottles citation needed Up until 1 January 2001 the Vinmonopolet government wine and spirits monopoly chain had deposits on products made by the company itself this did not include imported products citation needed All sellers of deposit marked drinking containers are required by law to accept returns of empty containers for cash As of 2016 drink containers can be returned and deposits retrieved at over 15 000 establishments in Norway The collection system is 95 automated using reverse vending machines and only 5 manual Most reverse vending machines in Norway are manufactured by Tomra Systems ASA citation needed Portugal edit In Portugal fillers must ensure that their return quotas are met which are 80 for beer 65 for wine with certain exceptions and 30 for soft drinks Retailers must sell refillable containers for all nonrefillables sold 94 Spain edit Spain has a voluntary deposit return scheme that is regulated by three laws 146 Act 11 1997 24 April packaging and packaging waste Chapter IV Deposit devolution and return system integrated management systems for used packaging and packaging waste Act 22 2011 28 July waste and contaminated soil Article 31 Royal Decree 293 2018 18 May on reducing the consumption of plastic bagsArticle 31 2 d of Act 21 2011 of 28 July establishes deposit systems that guarantee the return of the amounts deposited and the return of the product for reuse 146 147 In 2010 the overall return rate was calculated at 87 while the reuse of beer containers was 57 94 Sweden edit nbsp Deposit symbol of the old Swedish 50 ore 33 cl aluminium canIn Sweden there are deposits on nearly all ready to serve beverages including beer soft drinks cider and bottled water Since 2015 syrup producers can voluntarily join the deposit system Since 2017 juice producers are also allowed to join 148 The deposit values are as follows Metal SEK 1 Plastic lt 1 l SEK 1 Plastic gt 1 l SEK 2 Glass 33 cl SEK 0 60 an empty red bottle crate for 20 bottles has a SEK 22 40 deposit Glass 50 cl SEK 0 90 an empty blue bottle crate for 15 bottles has a SEK 28 00 deposit AB Svenska Returpack Pantamera sv 149 is responsible for the deposit system for aluminium cans and PET bottles 150 The aluminium cans have had a deposit since 1984 and PET bottles since 1994 Svensk GlasAtervinning AB is responsible for the deposit system of glass bottles 151 152 A glass bottle recycling system was introduced in 1884 and the bottles were first standardized in 1885 153 Until 1998 all hard alcohol and wine bottles sold at Systembolaget the government owned alcohol retail monopoly were sold in standardised reusable bottles with deposit but due to the deregulation of the Systembolaget s suppliers the former sole supplier V amp S Group dropped the deposit on their bottles due to the restricted bottle shapes giving V amp S a disadvantage compared to the competitors The bottles could be returned and deposit refunded until early 1999 at Systembolaget 154 The legislation regarding container deposit systems was updated so that from 1 January 2006 containers from other plastics and metals e g steel cans can be included in the deposit systems 155 156 The law also makes it illegal in Sweden to sell consumption ready beverages in containers that are not part of an authorized Swedish container deposit system with the exception of beverages that mainly consist of dairy products or vegetable fruit or berry juice However private importation from mainly Eastern European countries without deposit occurs by vendors that thus compete with a somewhat lower customer price The recycling of these contraband cans has not been seen as a problem but Returpack made a campaign in 2010 offering 0 10 krona for each imported can without deposit to the benefit of WWF retrieving 17 million cans In 2011 a similar campaign was repeated retrieving almost 18 million cans 157 The 1 5 L refillable PET bottle with a deposit of 4 00 kr has been discontinued and has been replaced by the 1 5 L recycle PET bottle The last day for returning bottles made by Spendrups for deposit was 30 June 2007 158 and the last day for bottles made by Coca Cola Sweden was 30 June 2008 159 Although Sweden is one of the leading countries in recycling of beverage containers Returpack uses TV commercials to promote more recycling Commercials have been made with well known melodies sung like Guantanamera and Pata pata sounding like Returpack s slogan panta mera i e recycle more 160 In 2016 the overall recycling rate was 84 9 for both aluminium cans and PET bottles which translates to 177 packages per person in Sweden 161 Switzerland and Liechtenstein edit This section relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this section by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Container deposit legislation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In Switzerland there is a government ruling that 75 of containers must be returned otherwise a deposit system may be introduced 162 Currently a handful of beverages including milk sold in glass bottles are done so with a small deposit of 30 or 50 rappen paid by the purchaser which is returned when the empty bottle is brought back to the store 163 According to the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment The IGORA Genossenschaft aluminium recycling cooperative levies a prepaid disposal fee on aluminium beverage cans and uses the fees to finance recycling activities 164 United Kingdom edit Until the turn of the 21st century most British bottled beer was sold whether in off licences or pubs in standard quart pint half pint or third pint nip bottles although some brewers preferred their own distinctive designs The standard deposit was 7pence p for a pint bottle and 5p for a half pint However in the absence of legislation and given the switch from pub to supermarket sales and from Imperial to metric measures the industry has now entirely abandoned refillable bottles citation needed Beer casks sold for the home or party consumption of draught beer are usually also loaned out against a deposit which may run to several tens of pounds citation needed England edit In England in January 2017 ministers were reported to be considering a 10p or 20p refundable deposit on plastic bottles and containers after Green Party co leader Caroline Lucas had voiced her support of such a scheme at the end of 2016 As of February 2017 the idea of a plastic bottle levy was unlikely as the government rejected the deposit scheme proposal 165 In March 2018 the UK government announced plans to introduce a deposit return scheme in England for drinks containers 166 Northern Ireland edit As of June 2015 Northern Ireland had been considering a drinks deposit scheme following the publication of a feasibility study for a deposit return scheme for drinks containers in Scotland 167 It has yet to implement such a scheme citation needed Scotland edit In Scotland some Barr products in 750 mL glass bottles had a 30p container deposit although this was discontinued in August 2015 Some Tesco stores have reverse vending machines which pay 1 2 p per aluminium can equivalent value in Tesco Clubcard Points Furthermore the landmark Climate Change Scotland Act 2009 passed by the Scottish Parliament contains within it powers for Scottish ministers to implement a national scheme 168 As of April 2017 a Holyrood motion supporting the idea of a small deposit on all drinks containers was signed by 66 MSPs including member from every party In May 2015 the Association for the Protection of Rural Scotland APRS published Scottish polling which revealed overwhelming support for deposit return The figures showed that 78 8 of those who expressed a view supported this approach for Scotland while just 8 5 opposed it 169 Several companies most notably large drinks corporations like Coca Cola are known to have lobbied against the introduction of a national deposit scheme 170 171 But in February 2017 the drinks company unexpectedly announced its support for a deposit return program in Scotland and in a statement to the Independent Coca Cola UK stated We have embarked on a major review of our sustainable packaging strategy to understand what role we can play in unlocking the full potential of a circular economy in Great Britain 172 On 5 September 2017 Scotland s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced that a deposit system would be implemented as a means to tackle the rising tide of waste 173 In March 2020 it was announced that the launch date would be delayed to July 2022 174 Wales edit As of March 2018 Welsh ministers are working on a plan to introduce a deposit return scheme 175 See also editReverse vending machine Waste hierarchyExplanatory notes edit England announced the introduction of a container deposit scheme in March 2018 it is unknown when it is to take effect 101 Malta announced in August 2020 that it will implement its container deposite scheme towards the end of 2021 102 The Netherlands already had container deposits for big PET bottles and introduced deposits for small PET bottles on 1 July 2021 Most likely the Dutch will also introduce deposits on cans in 2023 103 Scotland announced in March 2020 that its container deposit scheme will be launched in July 2022 104 References edit a b c Dalzall J M 2012 Food Industry and the Environment Practical Issues and Cost Implications Dordrecht Springer Science amp Business Media p 327 ISBN 9781461520979 Retrieved 12 August 2021 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 14 October 2012 Retrieved 27 October 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link A G Barr p l c Website About Us Frequently Asked Questions www agbarr co uk Archived from the original on 26 April 2014 Retrieved 13 January 2022 BottleBill org The British Columbia Deposit Law Austria bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Barbados bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Belarus bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Belgium bottlebill org Retrieved 6 February 2023 Croatia bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Historisk udvikling af pantsystemet bryggeriforeningen dk in Danish Retrieved 1 December 2023 Det nuvaerende pant og retursystem for flasker til ol og kulsyreholdige laeskedrikke har eksisteret siden 1922 da bryggerierne indgik en frivillig aftale om at benytte en faelles flaske til ol i stedet for bryggeriernes egne navnemaerkede flasker Bekendtgorelse om emballage til ol og laeskedrikke retsinformation dk in Danish Retrieved 1 December 2023 1 Stk 2 Ved returemballage forstas i denne bekendtgorelse emballage som indgar i et retursystem hvor en vaesentlig del af emballagerne efter tomningen hos forbrugeren returneres til fornyet pafyldning Denmark bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Ecuador bottlebill org Retrieved 1 October 2012 Estonia bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Fiji bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Finland bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Germany bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Iceland bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Ireland bottlebill org Retrieved 6 February 2023 Ireland DRSI Re Turn Retrieved 25 January 2023 Israel bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Jamaica bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Deposit Refund Scheme For Plastic Bottles Now In Place jis gov jm 25 June 2021 Retrieved 1 October 2023 Latvia bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Lithuania bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Ce que va changer la loi dechets dans notre quotidien virgule lu in French 27 April 2022 Retrieved 3 October 2023 Kiribati bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 BCRS Malta homepage bcrsmalta mt Retrieved 6 February 2023 Federated States of Micronesia bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Maharashtra India bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 The Netherlands bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Statiegeld Nederland statiegeldnederland nl Retrieved 24 January 2024 Norway bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Palau bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Polish government plans deposit system for plastic and glass bottles notesfrompoland com 9 April 2021 Retrieved 19 November 2021 TOMRA welcomes today s launch of Romania s deposit return scheme Tomra Retrieved 1 December 2023 Scotland bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Seychelles bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Singapore bottlebill org Retrieved 1 October 2023 Slovakia bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Spravca Zalohoveho Systemu Homepage spravcazaloh sk Retrieved 6 February 2023 South Korea bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Svensk forfattningssamling Retrieved 1 February 2022 Sweden bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Forordning 2022 1274 om producentansvar for forpackningar www riksdagen se in Swedish Retrieved 11 January 2024 Panta och atervinn som en vardagshjalte www systembolaget se in Swedish Retrieved 11 January 2024 Switzerland bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 Turkey bottlebill org Retrieved 19 November 2021 United Kingdom bottlebill org Retrieved 1 October 2023 Deposit Return Scheme for drinks containers moves a step closer gov uk 20 January 2023 Retrieved 1 October 2023 United Nations Environment Programme 2005 Selection Design and Implementation of Economic Instruments in the Solid Waste Management Sector in Kenya The Case of Plastic Bags United Nations Environment Programme p 11 ISBN 9789280725339 Retrieved 14 August 2021 Deepa Vallabh Lebogang Molebale Azola Futshane Plastics and packaging laws in South Africa CMS law Retrieved 11 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nyika Joan Mwihaki 2019 Sustainable Waste Management Challenges in Developing Countries Hershey Pennsylvania IGI Global p 344 ISBN 9781799802006 Retrieved 11 August 2021 a b c Stavins R N 2003 Handbook of Environmental Economics Environmental Degradation and Institutional Responses Amsterdam Elsevier p 376 ISBN 9780080495095 Retrieved 14 August 2021 All Provinces Table Canada Bottle Bill Retrieved 11 August 2021 CM Consulting 2016 Who Pays What 2016 PDF Retrieved 2 October 2017 Encorp Pacific Executive Summary 2017 Encorp Pacific Retrieved 2 October 2018 Double what you make Binners pleased with bottle deposit hike CBC News 24 October 2019 Frequently Asked Question Encorp Pacific Canada www return it ca Retrieved 9 May 2023 kieran 24 September 2021 Multi Materials Stewardship Board MMSB econext econext Retrieved 16 May 2023 Frequently Asked Questions Green Depot Retrieved 16 May 2023 a b c 25 Years of Guiding our Province to a Greener Future MMSB Multi Materials Stewardship Board Retrieved 16 May 2023 What s Accepted Green Depot Retrieved 16 May 2023 Roth Evan June 9 1985 Handling Called Messy Iowa Cleaner Bottle Law Praised Omaha World Herald Omaha Nebraska a b Jaquiss Nigel 1 February 2017 Corporate Lobbyists Turned Oregon s Iconic Bottle Bill Into a Sweet Payday For Their Clients Willamette Week Retrieved 8 September 2019 Merry George B January 27 1981 New bottle bills face crucial test in months ahead The Christian Science Monitor p 7 Maine s Beverage Container Redemption Program Bottle Bill Sustainability Maine Department of Environmental Protection maine gov Retrieved 2 September 2019 Merry George B November 18 1981 Bay State places nickel and dime bounty on all beverage containers The Christian Science Monitor p 9 Bottle Deposit New York stores carry the empty can Financial Times London United Kingdom September 17 1983 p 17 Acker Lizzy 3 August 2016 What you need to know about Oregon s 10 cent bottle deposit oregonlive Retrieved 8 September 2019 Cancellation of the 5 agora coin in Hebrew The Bank of Israel 1 January 2008 Archived from the original on 6 May 2016 Retrieved 4 September 2016 a b Reloop Platform amp CM Consulting Deposit Systems for One Way Beverage Containers Global Overview 2016 PDF Retrieved 2 October 2017 קריסטל מירב 30 November 2021 מהיום נשלם 30 אג על בקבוקים גדולים איפה יש מכונות אוטומטיות Ynet in Hebrew Retrieved 15 January 2024 A Guide to Trash and Garbage Disposal in Japan Japan Info Yeginsu Ceylan 17 October 2018 Istanbul Vending Machines Offer Subway Credit for Recycled Bottles and Cans New York Times Retrieved 31 December 2018 Deposit Return Scheme Aco Recycling 21 October 2021 Millions of dollars in attack ads coming in March The Sydney Morning Herald 24 October 2014 Victoria to introduce container deposit scheme as part of recycling industry overhaul ABC News 24 February 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Boomerang Alliance Request Rejected epa sa gov au Retrieved 2 October 2017 Container deposits Environment Protection Authority Retrieved 30 December 2017 Annual Report 2015 16 PDF Environment Protection Beverage Containers and Plastic Bags Act Northern Territory Environment Protection Authority Retrieved 30 December 2017 NSW CDS NSW Environment amp Heritage Retrieved 30 December 2017 A billion reasons to celebrate Return and Earn NSW Retrieved 5 May 2019 Container deposit scheme for Queensland qld gov au Queensland government Retrieved 27 July 2016 How it works CoEx Container Exchange Retrieved 5 May 2019 WA Government warned not to give beverage industry control of container deposit scheme ABC News 15 March 2019 Programs Department of Water and Environmental Regulation Department of Water and Environmental Regulation Government of Western Australia Archived from the original on 30 December 2017 Retrieved 30 December 2017 Victoria to introduce container deposit scheme to tackle recycling crisis The Guardian Australian Associated Press 24 February 2020 Retrieved 26 February 2020 Victorians to Benefit from New Container Deposit Scheme Premier of Victoria Country Report Fiji PDF THE ECONOMICS OF DEPOSIT REFUND SYSTEMS EXPLORING THE MARKET BASED ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES TO SUSTAIN THE ECOLOGICAL BALANCE OF DHAKA CITY Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Cabinet Approves Waste Management Laws Nand Edwin Cabinet approves amendments to laws Cabinet Approves Environment Management Waste Disposal And Recycling Amendment Regulations 2011 Fijian Government 29 September 2011 Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 2 October 2011 Blumhardt Hannah November 2018 Trashing Waste unlocking the wasted potential of New Zealand s Waste Minimisation Act Institute for Government and Policy Studies Snow Warren February 2019 HAPPY RETURNS A proposed model for a Container Deposit Scheme CDS for New Zealand PDF New Zealand Product Stewardship Council Cold drinks teara govt nz 11 March 2010 Retrieved 30 March 2021 Container return scheme An option for reducing litter and waste to landfill www mfe govt nz Retrieved 30 March 2021 Damian Carrington 27 March 2018 Bottle and can deposit return scheme gets green light in England The Guardian Retrieved 10 August 2021 Karl Azzopardi 30 August 2020 Bottle refund scheme postponed to 2021 due to eco contribution issues Minister The Malta Independent Retrieved 10 August 2021 Koos Schwartz 30 June 2021 Statiegeld op kleine flesjes gaat in dit moest er gebeuren in de supermarkt Trouw in Dutch Retrieved 10 August 2021 Coronavirus Deposit return scheme delayed until July 2022 BBC 16 March 2020 Retrieved 10 August 2021 Austria to add 0 25 deposit to price of cans and plastic bottles thelocal at 13 September 2022 Retrieved 4 November 2022 Proefproject met statiegeld voor blikjes in Brussel Brussel voert als eerste gewest statiegeld in voor blikjes en plastic flessen 18 July 2019 Reloop Platform amp CM Consulting 2016 Deposit Systems for One Way Beverage Containers Global Overview 2016 PDF Retrieved 2 October 2017 a b Historisk udvikling Bryggeri Foreningen in Danish Retrieved 9 April 2020 Et pantsystem vi kan vaere stolte af in Danish Carlsberg 2018 Retrieved 9 April 2020 a b Bekendtgorelse om pant pa og indsamling m v af emballager til visse drikkevarer in Danish Retsinformation Civilstyrelsen Ministry of Justice Retrieved 9 April 2020 Der kommer pant pa juice og saftflasker in Danish Miljo og Fodevareministeriet 26 June 2018 Retrieved 9 April 2020 Med eller uden pant in Danish Dansk Retur System Retrieved 9 April 2020 Deposit Amounts in Denmark Dansk Retur System Retrieved 2 October 2017 Reloop Platform amp CM Consulting 2016 Deposit Systems for One Way Beverage Containers PDF Retrieved 2 October 2017 Danskerne panter som aldrig for danskretursystem dk in Danish 16 March 2020 Retrieved 9 April 2020 Eesti Pandipakend OU How does the deposit system work Retrieved 2 October 2017 Reloop Platform amp CM Consulting Deposit Systems for One Way Beverage Containers Global Overview PDF Retrieved 2 October 2017 Return rates of Palpa s deposit packages in 2016 Laki eraiden juomapakkausten valmisteverosta 1037 2004 Finlex fi Retrieved on 2015 08 30 in Finnish Laura Descombes Erkka Ryynanen ja Mari Saario Pantti on arvostettu brandi Archived 2018 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Jateplus 42 2014 Jatehuoltoyhdistys ry Retrieved on 2015 08 30 in Finnish Fragen und Antworten zum Einweg Pfand Dosenpfand Mehrweg oder Einweg Verwirrung total beim Pfand About deposit clearing The German deposit system CCR Clearing Reverse Logistics Group Retrieved 10 June 2017 Ruling of the Constitutional Court of Germany Archived 2011 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Pfandkunde So funktioniert das deutsche Flaschenpfandsystem Deposit customer This is how the German bottle deposit system works PDF www getraenke streng de in German Retrieved 29 October 2023 a b c d e Oltermann Philip 30 March 2018 Has Germany hit the jackpot of recycling The jury s still out The Guardian Pfandbon Wie lange ist er gultig das Rechtsportal der ERGO Deutsch Danische Grenze Stillstand im Konflikt um Pfand Sonderzone 21 August 2020 Gassmann Michael 9 April 2014 Der Wahnsinn wenn Sie in Munchen Flens trinken The Madness of drinking Flens in Munich Die Welt in German Retrieved 30 October 2016 Nethonnun ehf Endurvinnslan English Endurvinnslan hf Recycling Ltd Deposit System Retrieved 2 October 2017 Re Turn Re Turn Ireland s new Deposit Return Scheme Uzstato Sistemos Administratorius Deposit Retrieved 2 October 2017 Recycling Lithuania deposit system exceeds all expectations Open Access Government 24 April 2018 Vending in reverse the industry is leading on returnable plastics Foodbev Media 9 July 2018 Reloop Platform amp CM Consulting Deposit Systems for One Way Beverage Containers Global Overview 2016 PDF Vanaf volgend jaar statiegeld op kleine plastic flesjes later mogelijk ook op blik nos nl 24 April 2020 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Statiegeld op kleine plastic flessen Eindelijk goed nieuws voor het milieu recyclingnetwerk org 24 April 2020 Retrieved 7 May 2020 Mission successful deposits on small plastic bottles Leiden University 29 June 2021 Retrieved 19 January 2024 Surfer makes waves on Thames over plastic recycling BBC 19 July 2023 Retrieved 19 January 2024 Vanaf volgende week statiegeld op blik ongelooflijke operatie nos nl 25 March 2023 Retrieved 11 April 2023 Kogel door de kerk per 31 december 2022 statiegeld op blikjes nos nl 3 February 2021 Retrieved 3 February 2021 Infinitum no homepage Infinitum no Beverage packaging excise duties skatteetaten no Skatteetaten a b Alfonso Codes Carlos Pena Plastics and packaging laws in Spain CMS law Retrieved 12 August 2021 Ley 22 2011 de 28 de julio de residuos y suelos contaminados Boletin Oficial del Estado in Spanish Agencia Estatal 28 July 2011 Retrieved 12 August 2021 2 En aplicacion de la responsabilidad ampliada y con la finalidad de promover la prevencion y de mejorar la reutilizacion el reciclado y la valorizacion de residuos los productores de productos que con el uso se convierten en residuos podran ser obligados a d Establecer sistemas de deposito que garanticen la devolucion de las cantidades depositadas y el retorno del producto para su reutilizacion o del residuo para su tratamiento en los casos de residuos de dificil valorizacion o eliminacion de residuos cuyas caracteristicas de peligrosidad determinen la necesidad del establecimiento de este sistema para garantizar su correcta gestion o cuando no se cumplan los objetivos de gestion fijados en la normativa vigente Vad kan pantas in Swedish Returpack AB Retrieved 10 September 2019 Pantamera Fakta om Returpack AB Svenska Returpack Archived from the original on 30 August 2009 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Om du har producentansvar Svensk Glasatervinning Archived from the original on 24 October 2020 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Svensk Glasatervinning Sveriges Bryggerier Archived from the original on 18 April 2013 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Standard sedan 1885 Svergies Bryggerier Archived from the original on 23 September 2007 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Sista chansen att panta vin och spritflaskor Aftonbladet 21 February 1999 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Fakta om Returpack PDF AB Svenska Returpack Archived from the original PDF on 19 September 2007 Retrieved 7 January 2010 Svensk forfattningssamling SFS 2005 220 PDF Parliament of Sweden 14 April 2005 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Valkommen till Pantamera Pantamera Viktig information angaende 4 pant for harda retur PET flaskor Sverige PDF Press release in Swedish Sveriges Bryggerier July 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 20 March 2009 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Pant upphor 30 juni 2008 Sveriges Bryggerier Archived from the original on 23 April 2008 Retrieved 2 July 2008 Returpack s YouTube channel Pantamera About Returpack Retrieved 2 October 2017 Bundeskanzlei P SR 814 621 Verordnung vom 5 Juli 2000 uber Getrankeverpackungen VGV Coop lancia il latte intero bio Naturaplan in vetro riutilizzabile Switzerland Circular Online Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Drinks bottles and can deposit return scheme proposed BBC News 28 March 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 Circular Online Archived from the original on 2 October 2017 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Climate Change Scotland Act 2009 www legislation gov uk Archived from the original on 16 October 2010 Retrieved 13 January 2022 New campaign launched for a deposit return system for Scotland 27 September 2015 Industry s battle to block drinks deposit scheme 3 October 2016 Jamieson Sophie 15 February 2017 Plastic bottle tax unlikely as Government rejects deposit scheme proposal The Telegraph Coca Cola in recycling U turn as firm backs Scottish drinks bottle return scheme Independent co uk 22 February 2017 Nicola Sturgeon announces can and bottle deposit return scheme 5 September 2017 Deposit return scheme delayed until July 2022 BBC News 16 March 2020 Bottle deposit scheme Welsh ministers already working on plan BBC News 28 March 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Container deposit legislation Container Recycling Institute Bottle Bill Resource Guide Deposit System Administration Dansk Retursystem A S operator of the Danish deposit and return system in Danish and English Norsk Resirk operator of the Norwegian deposit and return system in Norwegian and English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Container deposit legislation amp oldid 1202310070, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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