Within the UK waste sector, support for a Deposit Return Scheme (DRS) has long been treated as a given. Higher capture rates, cleaner material streams, less litter, the theory is compelling and the international evidence is well established but a quieter question is now beginning to surface across the industry.
Do we actually know what problem DRS is fixing in a post Simpler Recycling world? This isn’t an argument against DRS. We know well designed deposit systems clearly work; the real issue for the UK is one of timing, sequencing and value, and right now, those questions deserve a more honest airing.Simpler Recycling represents the most significant structural shift in UK collections in my career, in a generation even. Consistent household collections, aligned workplace recycling, mandatory core materials; the direction of travel is clear and in principle welcome but most local authorities are still adjusting; workplace reforms are still bedding in and behaviour change is still evolving. Infrastructure is still being configured.
In other words, we are mid-transition, not at a steady state which raises a perfectly reasonable operational question: should we be layering a major parallel collection system on top of one that has not yet fully stabilised?
Deposit Return Schemes are often discussed primarily in terms of environmental upside. Less frequently examined is the cost required to deliver them. A national DRS is not a light touch intervention. It brings with it three substantial cost centres.
Reverse vending machines/retail take-back arrangements, backhaul logistics and counting centres represent significant fixed investment and these costs exist regardless of whether the UK gains five percentage points of additional capture or twenty.
DRS does not operate in a vacuum. It sits alongside kerbside collections, commercial recycling services and existing materials contracts. The potential for duplication, material leakage between systems and local authority revenue displacement is real and must be carefully managed. International experience shows that mature DRS schemes must invest heavily in scheme integrity: barcode validation, cross-border fraud prevention, audit systems and compliance monitoring. None of this makes DRS unworkable but robust control frameworks are not cost neutral.
Taken together, this is a complex and capital-intensive policy tool.
The most important question for the UK is not ideological, but mathematical. What is the cost per additional tonne captured via DRS compared with what Simpler Recycling may already deliver? If consistent collections and workplace reforms significantly lift the capture of bottles and cans as many expect, then the incremental gain delivered by DRS may be narrower than headline comparisons with other countries suggest.
If current reforms push capture toward the mid-to-high 70% range and DRS pushes that into the high 80s or low 90s, the policy question becomes whether the final tranche of material justifies the full parallel system cost. In a world of constrained public and producer finances, marginal gains matter but so does marginal cost.
None of this is to dismiss the genuine strengths of deposit systems. Evidence consistently shows DRS performs strongly in ‘on-the-go capture’, litter reduction, production of very high quality PET and aluminium and clear consumer signalling around material value. These are real benefits and should be acknowledged openly but recognising strengths does not remove the need for careful sequencing/allowing bedding-in periods.
As stated, the UK is in the middle of the most significant recycling system reform in years. Before committing fully to another major structural intervention, there is a credible case for allowing Simpler Recycling to bed in and for capture data to stabilise.
This is not about delay for its own sake. It’s about designing the right intervention for the actual residual problem rather than the one we assumed several years ago when policy direction was first set, because in waste policy, as in most operational systems, timing is rarely a footnote, it’s often the difference between smart reform and expensive overlap.
The question is no longer simply whether DRS works, the more practical UK question may be - should we implement DRS now or should we first allow Simpler Recycling to settle, measure the true capture gap and only then deploy the intervention that closes it most effectively? That is a debate worth having. More like this (DRS) – link – more like this (recycling) – link – more like this (random) - link














