On paper, that doesn't sound enormous. The UK produces far larger tonnages of paper/cardboard, food waste, glass, metals and rubble but crisp packets are deceptive because they're amongst the lightest, bulkiest, lowest-value and most technically awkward packaging materials in the entire waste system, and from March 2027, under England’s Simpler Recycling reforms, they're expected to become part of routine kerbside recycling collection which raises the question - are we about to build a nationwide collection infrastructure for one of the least economically attractive waste streams in Britain?
And if we are, how exactly do we measure whether it was worth it?
First question:- are crisp packets actually included under Simpler Recycling? Yes, probably, definitely, it depends on who you ask. Plastic films and flexible packaging are certainly due to enter mandatory kerbside collection systems by March 2027 and industry guidance already being circulated commonly includes, bread bags, cling film, frozen food bags, carrier bags, sweet wrappers and crisp packets within the expected scope.
However, there is an important complication. Crisp packets are not simple plastics. They're usually metallised laminated films made from multiple bonded layers including polymers, coatings, inks, adhesives and metallic barriers which makes them excellent at preserving food and notoriously difficult to recycle economically; precisely why crisp packets spent decades outside mainstream kerbside recycling systems in the first place.
Collecting crisp packets is not the same thing as recycling them. To recycle crisp packets nationally, the UK requires new collection systems; new sorting infrastructure; significantly more and improved optical separation technology; wash plants; decontamination systems; extrusion capability; end-market manufacturing demand; transport logistics and public communications campaigns.
All of the above for a packaging stream with very little intrinsic commodity value and because crisp packets weigh almost nothing, the logistics become peculiar. You can fill bins, compactors and countless walking floor trailers with them and still recover comparatively tiny tonnages which means collection costs per tonne become disproportionately high.
So What Might This Actually Cost?
Nobody yet knows the true long-term national cost, but we can make some broad back of the envelope observations. Kerbside film collection will require additional vehicle capacity, extra sorting stages and almost certainly reduce MRF efficiency. It will also demand greater contamination management, increased labour input and specialist downstream processing but unlike materials such as aluminium or copper, crisp packets have very limited material value to offset those additional costs which means the economics increasingly rely on Extended Producer Responsibility funding, modulated packaging fees, PRNs, legislation, carbon accounting and public policy intervention. If crisp packet recycling were naturally economically viable, would governments need to mandate it? Of course not.
That doesn't necessarily mean it shouldn't happen but it does change the nature of the discussion - the Waste-to-Energy argument nobody wants to touch
Here's the part of the debate the industry often tiptoes around. Crisp packets are fundamentally hydrocarbon based materials which means they also possess significant calorific value. Modern Energy-from-Waste facilities already recover energy from residual waste streams extremely efficiently compared with historic landfill disposal so the question emerges - is it actually environmentally better to collect, transport, sort, wash and process crisp packets for recycling or (shock horror) to recover energy from them locally through EfW?
How Do We Measure Success - (is success measured by):
• recycling rate?
• carbon reduction?
• landfill diversion?
• resource circularity?
• energy recovery?
• public perception?
• litter reduction?
• behavioural change?
• fossil fuel displacement?
• financial cost?
• carbon per tonne handled?
Because these do not always point in the same direction. A crisp packet may perform terribly in recycling economics but badly in litter terms yet efficiently in transport emissions while performing reasonably well in energy recovery - meaning the best environmental option becomes far less obvious than social media slogans suggest.
Other Countries Are Already Doing It
The UK is not entering entirely unknown territory. Countries including the Netherlands, Germany, Australia and parts of Scandinavia already operate flexible plastic collection systems with varying degrees of success. Some use advanced optical sorting, chemical recycling, mass balance systems, dedicated film recovery plants and producer-funded infrastructure.
Many of these systems work because the economics are supported collectively through national policy frameworks rather than relying on material resale value which matters enormously because it suggests the future of difficult-material recycling may not depend on whether the material itself is valuable but whether society collectively decides the environmental outcome is worth paying for.
The Bigger Question Hidden Inside A Crisp Packet
This crisp packet debate is no longer about crisp packets. It's about what modern recycling is becoming. Historically, recycling worked best where the materials were valuable, the sorting was simple, contamination was low; the logistics made sense and soft plastics recycling challenges all four assumptions simultaneously.
Perhaps that's why March 2027 matters so much because Britain is about to discover whether society is prepared to fund recycling systems not because they are profitable (quite the opposite) but because politically, environmentally and morally, throwing things away increasingly feels unacceptable and that's a very different philosophy from the recycling industry of twenty years ago. More like this (crisp packets) - link - more like this (kerbside collections) - link













