Home / Environment / Inside London's Recycling Chaos: Fires, Robots, and Wrong Bins
Inside London's Recycling Chaos: Fires, Robots, and Wrong Bins
25 Feb
Summary
- London's recycling rate is stalled at 33%, missing targets.
- Batteries in recycling bins cause one fire daily at facilities.
- Inconsistent recycling rules across London boroughs confuse residents.

London's recycling rate remains stagnant at approximately 33%, failing to meet ambitious targets set by the Mayor. A visit to Veolia's Southwark site reveals the complex process of sorting 100,000 tonnes of waste annually, utilizing AI robots and human workers. However, "wish cycling"—items incorrectly placed in recycling bins—and hazardous materials like batteries pose significant problems.
These batteries are responsible for daily fires at recycling facilities, posing a severe risk to human health and operations. Compounding the issue, London's 32 boroughs operate under vastly different recycling schemes, leading to widespread confusion. This inconsistency is a major barrier to improving recycling rates across the capital.
New government legislation, 'Simpler Recycling,' aims to standardize collections by April, grouping glass, metals, and plastics together, and paper and cardboard separately, with food waste in its own bin. While this is expected to simplify instructions and reduce collection frequency, local authorities retain some flexibility.
Officials aim for London to achieve a 65% recycling rate by 2030. However, critics point to the current fragmented system and the need for a unified approach across all boroughs to truly boost recycling performance and move towards a zero-waste city.




