Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Plastic water bottles
Plastic water bottles - Credit: pressmaster / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
Nature
deposit scheme
plastic bottle
Packaging Waste Fund
Hester Klein Lankhorst
Monday, 7 August 2023 - 15:30

Share this article:

Over 1 million small plastic bottles per day not returned for deposit

Since July 2021, a deposit system has applied to small plastic bottles - water bottles and soft drink bottles, for example - in the Netherlands. But only 58 percent of the sold bottles were returned for a deposit last year. That amounts to 400 million bottles not returned that year, or over one million plastic bottles per day, AD reports based on figures from the Packaging Waste Fund.

When large bottles are included in the figures, 68 percent of plastic bottles got returned for deposit last year. The legal target is that 90 percent of all bottles must be collected. The business community, united in the Packaging Waste Fund, is obliged to achieve the target. The Environmental Inspectorate can take measures if it deems it necessary.

The fact that over 40 percent of small plastic bottles aren’t returned for a deposit is not because people aren’t familiar with the system - 91 percent of Netherlands residents know about its existence. Netherlands residents have been able to return glass and cardboard for decades, and the deposit scheme for tin cans started earlier this year.

“You can only conclude that people do not want to or that it is not made easy enough for them. We’ll have to deal with that,” Hester Klein Lankhorst of the Packaging Waste Fund told AD.

“A big problem is with on the go, for example, if you have been on the train, walk out of the station, and still have that bottle. That often ends up in the regular trash. NS stations often have a collection device, but walking there still takes too much effort. I experience that myself,” Klein Lankhorts said.

The business community has committed to placing more collection points at busy areas like schools, amusement parks, and festivals. “But you can’t put 30 devices on a station; people will also have to make a little more effort,” Klein Lankhorst added, pointing out that there are already 28,000 collection points in the Netherlands.

The Packaging Waste Fund, therefore, also hired behavioral scientists to investigate why people don’t return their bottles and how to change that.

More like this

Image
A sign explaining the deposit scheme on plastic bottles on a vending machine for soft drinks in the Rotterdam neighborhood of Kralingen-Crooswijk, 8 January 2023
Higher deposit on plastic bottles, cans on the way: report
Image
A sign explaining the deposit scheme on plastic bottles on a vending machine for soft drinks in the Rotterdam neighborhood of Kralingen-Crooswijk, 8 January 2023
Dutch businesses refusing to place vending machines for returning deposit bottles, cans
Image
Garbage piled up on the street in Amsterdam. 26 November 2007
Amsterdam to stop collecting loose garbage bags in an attempt to fight litter
Image
A sign explaining the deposit scheme on plastic bottles on a vending machine for soft drinks in the Rotterdam neighborhood of Kralingen-Crooswijk, 8 January 2023
More plastic bottles returned for deposit; Target still far out of sight
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Hundreds of thousands of Dutch use Ozempic to lose weight; Third without prescription
  • Controversial FVD-affiliated school reopens with state funding confirmed
  • Record variable electricity prices forecast for Wednesday evening in Netherlands
  • Netherlands under code orange as record heat intensity levels recorded in Eindhoven
  • Rijkswaterstaat extends nationwide heat measures, postpones A12 roadworks

Top stories

  • Six arrested in electoral fraud investigation; Allegations of forgery, voter coercion
  • Hottest night on Dutch records expected tomorrow; Code Orange takes effect at noon
  • 270 children abducted to or from the Netherlands last year; Increase of over 25%
  • Public transport strike from 4 a.m. to 8 a.m.: No trains, buses, trams, metros running
  • Life sentence sought for Dutch-Rwandan man over massacre of 3,000 Tutsi in 1994 genocide

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content