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  1. Home > Live > Bins and Recycling. Important Information. Commercial operators may deposit waste at Craigahulliar landfill site up to 30th August 2024 unless advised otherwise. Farm waste will be...

    • Recycling

      Contact Us. Causeway Coast & Glens Borough Council,...

  2. Jul 22, 2010 · Moyle District Council would also encourage members of the public to contact the councils Environmental Health department on 02820762225 to report incidents of illegal dumping or littering within the district.

  3. Feb 15, 2011 · A MOYLE Council officer has explained how they are implementing their bin collection policy following criticism from DUP councillor Robert McIlroy who has rubbished the new procedures.

  4. Mar 27, 2015 · Moyle District Council has recognised the importance of a strong and agreed vision for the Village and is providing the resources to support the Steering Group to complete this important task.

    • Waste from Households
    • Waste from Households – Financial Year Figures
    • Management of All Local Authority Collected Waste, 2021/22
    • England and The Regions Local Authority Collected Waste Destinations
    • Household Waste Recycling
    • Data and Methodology
    • Glossary of Terms and Measures
    • Recycling Rates Across The United Kingdom
    • A National Statistics Publication

    3.1 Waste from Households

    ‘Waste from households’ is the measure introduced by the UK in 2014 to provide a harmonised UK indicator for reporting recycling rates at a UK level. It excludes local authority collected waste not considered to have come directly from households, such as street bins, street sweepings, parks and grounds waste, and compost-like output. For more information, refer to the Data and Methodologysection of this notice.

    3.3 Waste from Households: Dry Recycling Composition

    1. Dry recycling including IBA metals increased by 0.1 million to 6.0 million tonnes in 2021. It made up 25.9 per cent of total ‘waste from households’ and 58.5 per cent of all ‘waste from households’ recycling. 2. Glass decreased by 24 thousand tonnes (-1.6 per cent) in 2021. Plastics decreased by 5 thousand tonnes (-1.0 per cent), metals decreased by 2 thousand tonnes (-0.7 per cent), 3. Paper and card increased by 57 thousand tonnes (2.7 per cent). Textiles increased by 13 thousand tonnes...

    In 2021/22, the total weight of ‘waste from households’ in England decreased to 22.8 million tonnes down 0.8 per cent from 23.0 million tonnes in 2020/21.
    The amount of ‘waste from households’ sent to recycling in 2021/22 remained at 10.1 million tonnes down just 0.2 per cent from 2020/21.
    The ‘waste from households’ recycling rate was 44.1 per cent in 2021/22, an increase of 0.3 percentage points on the 2020/21 recycling rate, which was 43.8 per cent.
    Dry recycling was 5.8 million tonnes in 2021/22, decreasing by 1.8 per cent from 6.0 million in 2020/21. Organic recycling increased by 2.1 per cent to 4.2 million tonnes. This increase reflecting...

    Local authority collected waste consists of all ‘waste from households’, street sweepings, municipal parks and gardens waste, beach cleansing waste, and waste resulting from the clearance of fly-tipped materials plus some commercial and/or industrial waste. For further detail, see Annex 1 of “Local authority waste statistics – Recycling measures”on...

    There are regional differences in the management of local authority collected waste, as shown in Table 4 and Figure 10.

    7.1 Household Waste Recycling Rates for England and the Regions

    The ‘household waste’ (ex-NI 192) measure is a broader definition of waste than the ‘waste from households’ measure. It includes street bins, street sweepings, gully-emptying, parks and grounds waste, soil, and compost-like output, as well as separately collected healthcare waste and asbestos. It does not include IBA metals. At a regional level, there is considerable variation across authorities, influenced by how heavily populated an area is, the kind of housing present, and the level of oth...

    7.2 Household Waste Recycling Rates for Individual Local Authorities

    A dataset of recycling rates for all local authorities in England can be found in Table 3 of the local authority collected waste generation dataset. 1. At an individual local authority level, ‘household waste’ recycling rates ranged from 17.7 per cent to 63.5 per cent in 2021/22. The overall average figure for England was 42.5 per cent, a 0.2 percentage point increase from 2020/21. 2. ‘Household waste’ recycling is often similar in adjacent authorities, though there is a wide range between th...

    7.3 Household Waste Recycling Rates Local authority performance by region

    Figure 2 in the datasetsaccompanying this statistical notice shows the geographic distribution of changes in the recycling rates in 2021/22. Table 6 shows the number and proportion of authorities in each region showing an overall increase in their recycling rate for 2021/22 compared to 2020/21. 1. In total 169 (51 per cent) of the 333 local authorities in England showed an increase in their recycling rate in 2021/22. 164 authorities (49 per cent) showed a decrease. 2. London and Eastern had a...

    Including information on data uses, feedback, revisions policy, methodology, glossary of terms and measures, and references. There is an accompanying methodology documentfor this release.

    ‘Waste from Households’ The ‘waste from households’ measure was introduced to statistical publications by Defra in May 2014. It is used to construct a harmonised UK indicator for reporting recycling rates at a UK level on a calendar year basis, providing comparable calculations across each of the four UK countries. ‘Waste from households’ is a narr...

    As detailed above the ‘Waste from households’ recycling rate provides a consistent measure across England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland and allows reporting at UK level. However it should be noted that other National measures for Household recycling or recycling of all local authority collected waste differ across the devolved administratio...

    National Statistics are produced to high professional standards set out in the National Statistics Code of Practice. They undergo regular quality assurance reviews to ensure they meet customer needs.

  5. Causeway Coast and Glens Borough Council is a local authority in Northern Ireland that was established on 1 April 2015. It covers most of the northern coast of Northern Ireland and replaced Ballymoney Borough Council , Coleraine Borough Council , Limavady Borough Council and Moyle District Council .

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  7. Moyle District Council was a local council in County Antrim in the northeast of Northern Ireland. It merged with Ballymoney Borough Council, Coleraine Borough Council and Limavady Borough Council in May 2015 under local government reorganisation to become Causeway Coast and Glens District Council.

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