What happens to our waste?

Arrangements for the disposal of household waste produced in our area are set out in our Integrated Waste Management Services Contract we have with Veolia.

Integrated Waste Management Services contract

Veolia has a complete approach to managing the area’s waste. In addition to final disposal, it includes:

  • waste prevention, reduction and reuse
  • recycling (including green waste composting)
  • recovery of energy from waste
  • development of new waste management facilities
  • management of the Household Waste Recycling Sites in the contract area.

Waste collection (the emptying of dustbins) remains the responsibility of the local East Sussex district and borough councils and Brighton & Hove City Council.

New facilities

New facilities have been built to manage our waste since the start of the contract in 2003:

Household waste recycling sites

  • Crowborough – replacement for a mobile site in 2004.
  • Maresfield, Uckfield – replacement for a mobile site in 2009.
  • Pebsham, Hastings – relocation of existing site in 2012.

Waste transfer stations

These move waste around the county and reduce waste vehicle traffic.

  • Maresfield, Uckfield – opened 2009.
  • Pebsham, Hastings – opened 2007 on the refurbished Reprotech site.
  • Hollingdean, Brighton – opened 2008, with the capacity to process 120,000 tonnes of waste per year.

Other waste facilities

Materials Recovery Facility, Hollingdean – opened 2008. Up to 80 thousand tonnes of recycling can be sorted and prepared for reprocessing, per year.

Woodlands Composting Plant, Whitesmith – opened 2009. Green waste and food waste from kerbside collections and recycling sites is turned into a quality soil conditioner.

Energy Recovery Facility, Newhaven – opened 2011. This facility burns up to 210 thousand tonnes of waste, per year which can not be recycled and that would otherwise be delivered to landfill sites. The electricity produced is sold to the National Grid and supplies about 25,000 homes.

You can visit the waste facilities and our contractor puts on regular tours. For details, contact Veolia.

The facility visitor centres are easily accessible and there are disabled parking bays and toilets on site. However, operational areas may be less accessible and may not be suited to those with limited mobility. Hearing and guide dogs are permitted except in the operational areas. contact Veolia to discuss your access requirements.

Business or trade waste

We do not manage business or trade waste. You can find more information about this and fly-tipping on our business waste page.

Abandoned vehicles

Around 150 vehicles are abandoned each year in East Sussex. We are working with the local district and borough councils and Sussex Police in a partnership to deal with this problem. For more information or to report an abandoned vehicle, see Operation Crackdown.


What happens to your recycling?

Items from household waste recycling sites and kerbside collections are sent to different places for reprocessing. Some household waste recycling sites have a shop where reusable items are sold to the public. We also work with charitable organisations.

See how the recycling collected from some residents' homes is dealt with:


- The journey of your recycling

Watch on YouTube: "The journey of your recycling"

Cardboard and paper

Cardboard and paper are processed in the UK and abroad. Cardboard usually ends up as packaging materials. Paper is pulped, cleaned and made into new paper products.

Plastic bottles

Bottles are sorted into different grades at sites in the UK. The plastic is turned into a raw material to make food packaging.

Glass and lightbulbs

Glass bottles and jars end up at different UK plants and after sorting are used to make new bottles and jars.

Fluorescent tubes and low-energy lightbulbs go to Surrey where they are crushed and separated into glass, aluminium and phosphor powder. The glass and aluminium is used to make new products. Mercury is safely removed and the powder is re-used.

Metal and electricals

Metal is sorted locally, then processed and made into new products.

Aluminium cans are sent to Wales or Cheshire and melted down to produce new aluminium products such as cans. Steel cans are sent to various UK plants ending up as new cans or other steel products, such as white goods and bicycles.

Electricals including TVs, monitors and fridge/freezers are dismantled in Lewes. Cathode ray tubes and environmentally harmful gases are removed and the metals and plastics are recycled.

Textiles and shoes

Wearable items are sent to developing countries. Others become industrial rags or stuffing for cushions and mattresses. They are also used to strengthen recycled cardboard, and in the production of carpet underlay.

Green garden waste

Green waste is processed locally at Whitesmith in East Sussex and used to build tall rows of shredded waste called windrows. Natural micro-organisms break it down into compost which is screened, sieved and used as soil conditioner in the agricultural industry.

The soil conditioner is also available for residents to buy at all the household waste recycling sites in East Sussex.

Construction waste, wood, MDF and plasterboard

Hardcore, rubble and soil is used in the UK construction industry for example to construct site roads.

MDF is taken to plants abroad and used to provide district heating.

Timber and wood is taken to local plants and turned into woodchip suitable for board making (such as MDF).

Plasterboard goes to Kent, where the gypsum and paper are separated. Gypsum is used as agricultural fertilizer and in the oil absorbency industry, or for new plasterboard. The paper is used for animal bedding.

Oil, batteries and tyres

Engine oil is cleaned and filtered, becoming reusable fuel oil.

Cooking oil is turned into biofuel in Norfolk.

Car batteries are sent to Derbyshire where the acid is removed and recycled. The lead is recycled into new car batteries.

Household batteries are sent abroad. The batteries are sorted and the material treated and used in various manufacturing industries.

Tyres go to Worthing. They are used for land engineering projects such as coastal protection schemes. Others are sent abroad to extract the oil or used as fuel in cement works.

What controls are in place to ensure the material is recycled?

We work with two extremely experienced waste management companies:

  • Veolia – who deal with the majority of waste from householders across the County including the collected black bag waste and green garden waste; the waste and recycling brought by residents to the household waste recycling sites; and the recycling collected from Brighton & Hove residents, and
  • N&P Crayford MRF Ltd (previously Viridor) – who handle the recycling once its been collected from Eastbourne, Hastings, Lewes, Rother and Wealden households.

We work closely with both our contractors to ensure they work to expected standards. We ensure that they comply with their legal duties such as their Duty of Care when handling, transporting and processing our waste. In addition, the Environment Agency (the waste regulator) also regulates waste management through a system of licences and monitoring.

All local authorities are required to report to the Environment Agency and Central Government what they do with their waste and recycling. This data is publicly available through an online portal called WasteDataFlow, specifically ‘Question 100’ and is audited by the regulator.

With regards to plastic recycling, Veolia state that all plastic recycling is processed in the UK or Europe. Every end-destination is visited, audited and accredited to ensure the materials residents recycle are actually recycled.

N&P Crayford MRF Ltd (previously Viridor) state that the resource market remains a global market, governed by the principles of supply and demand and where any material is sent abroad, only works with Environment Agency accredited and licensed facilities. Materials are sold as an “end-of-waste product”, which means they are reprocessed in the UK to produce a plastic pellet or flake and reused in manufacturing as a recyclable material. N&P Crayford MRF Ltd has a robust system of traceability with regard to its supply chain and receives accreditation from the companies it works with, demonstrating reprocessing has taken place.

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