Sweden's deposit return system passes three billion containers for first time. More than three billion PET bottles and aluminium cans were returned through Sweden's deposit return system in 2025, according to Returpack/Pantamera. The return rate rose to 88.4 per cent, approaching the 90 per cent national target, with each person returning an average of 283 containers.
The system delivered 27,826 metric tonnes of aluminium and 24,835 metric tonnes of PET to material buyers in 2025. Sara Bergendorff, head of sustainability and quality at Returpack/Pantamera, said returning containers through the deposit system rather than general packaging recycling cuts the carbon footprint of the materials in half, keeping them in closed loops that preserve quality for reuse as new packaging.
High-capacity reverse vending machines, which allow entire bags of containers to be emptied at once, now account for 14 per cent of all machines but handle 45 per cent of total volume. Launched in 1984 as the world's first deposit return system, Sweden has collected more than 55 billion bottles and cans to date.
The UK processed 4.013 million tonnes of waste wood in 2025, 89 per cent of the total generated, according to annual statistics from the Wood Recyclers' Association. The figure is down 7.3 per cent on 2024 after unplanned outages at end-use plants created oversupply and squeezed storage.
recell.store, the Altilium-owned marketplace for used EV batteries, has partnered with testing firm ClearWatt to offer battery health assessments to salvage yards and dismantlers. A pilot will use ClearWatt's EV Flash Test to generate independent health data supporting marketplace transactions.
Packaging firm Pact Group has invested in Plan B Circular, the UK textile-to-textile polyester recycler behind Project Re:claim, its joint venture with the Salvation Army Trading Company (SATCoL). The deal aims to scale polyester recycling ahead of EU legislation expected in 2028.