Home / Environment / Scotland Landfill Ban Delayed: Waste Woes Ahead
Scotland Landfill Ban Delayed: Waste Woes Ahead
25 Nov, 2025
Summary
- Scotland's landfill ban for biodegradable waste is postponed until 2028.
- Insufficient domestic treatment capacity caused the delay in enforcement.
- The ban affects food waste, paper, textiles, garden waste, and wood.

Scotland's initiative to eliminate biodegradable municipal waste from landfills has encountered a significant delay. While the legislation was slated for full enforcement at the end of 2025, the date has been pushed back to January 1, 2028, owing to a critical shortfall in domestic treatment facilities. This deferral underscores the complexities of aligning advanced circular economy aspirations with tangible infrastructure capabilities.
The postponement directly addresses Scotland's limited capacity for processing biodegradable materials such as food waste, paper, textiles, garden waste, and wood. Several new energy-from-waste plants are under construction, but their completion is not anticipated until around 2027-2028. During this interim period, waste producers can seek renewable six-month exemptions from SEPA, provided they meet stringent reporting and waste prevention requirements.
This infrastructure gap poses challenges for the packaging industry, necessitating careful planning for shifting waste streams, particularly concerning biodegradable and mixed materials. The delay does not alter Scotland's long-term zero-waste objectives but serves as a reminder of the practical hurdles in achieving ambitious environmental targets. Companies will need to adapt to this transitional phase, focusing on improved recovery routes and potential reliance on cross-border processing solutions.




