Public backs action to end throwaway economy, Green Alliance polling finds. Polling commissioned by Green Alliance found strong public support for ending throwaway culture, with backing for a right to repair and taxes on resource-wasting businesses. The think tank has urged Andy Burnham to publish the delayed Circular Economy Growth Plan as an early priority.
The survey, conducted by Yonder Consulting with 2,043 British adults in July 2025, found Labour voters were especially concerned about overconsumption and waste. Support for circular economy measures cut across regions and socioeconomic groups. More than 50 business and industry figures have separately called for the strategy’s release, and Green Alliance says the plan is ready to go.
Labour’s 2024 manifesto committed to a circular economy, and a taskforce of industry and academic experts was convened later that year. A strategy was due in October 2025 but was delayed and still unreleased when Keir Starmer resigned in June 2026.
The Environment Agency has published a watchlist of 117 high priority waste sites across England, 67 of which hold more than 1,000 tonnes of waste. The regulator says it will update the list monthly as part of its commitment to stepping up action on waste crime.
EMR has joined REACT-UK, a £6.5 million project to establish a circular UK supply chain for rare earth magnets from end-of-life electric and hybrid vehicles. The three-year project, part-funded by the Department for Business and Trade, brings together six partners including Jaguar Land Rover.
Marley has launched what it says is the UK’s first concrete roof tile made with carbon captured cement, using Heidelberg Materials’ evoZero product. The Edgemere 2.0 tile has a global warming potential of 1.86kg CO2e per square metre from cradle to gate and a Green Guide A+ rating.
Polling commissioned by Green Alliance found strong public support for ending throwaway culture, with backing for a right to repair and taxes on resource-wasting businesses. The think tank has urged Andy Burnham to publish the delayed Circular Economy Growth Plan as an early priority.
PackUK has set a 1 September 2026 deadline for producers paying pEPR fees to resubmit corrected 2025 packaging data. The UK-wide cut-off gives producers a five-month window from the 1 April reporting deadline. After 1 September, resubmissions will not affect Notices of Liability or disposal fees.