Council backs Govt plan to increase landfill levies

Photo: Newsline/CCC
Photo: Newsline/CCC
The Christchurch City Council is supporting a move by the Government to increase the levy rates for landfills.

It has made a submission on the Ministry for the Environment's Reducing Waste: A More Effective Landfill Levy consultation document, saying it wants the Ministry to consider going further because it is worried about the increasing levels of waste going to landfill.

The Ministry announced late last year that it is proposing to increase the levy on landfills that take household waste. Currently the levy is $10 per tonne. Under new proposal the levy would increase to $50 or $60 per tonne by mid-2023.

The Ministry is also proposing to extend the levy to cover more landfill types, including industrial, construction and demolition fills, but not cleanfills or farm dumps. The newly levied landfills would be charged at a rate of $10 or $20 per tonne depending on their type.

But the council is also calling on central government to urgently legislate so that the full disposal cost of any product is included as part of its manufacturing or production costs.

"New Zealand’s level of consumption and reliance on landfills for disposal of materials is out of step with the majority of the developed world,’’ the council says in its submission on the proposed levy increases.

"A significant change is required to drive a more resourceful society, where materials currently thrown away, due to cheap costs of disposal, are valued and recovered.

"The primary driver for this change will be an increase in the costs of disposal (levy) as well as substitution and investment into resource recovery,’’ said the council’s submission, which was signed off on Thursday by the finance and performance committee, says.

Its submission also says a uniform levy should apply across all landfill types.

"The proposed expansion and increase of the waste levy is a positive step forwards further using the powers in the Waste Minimisation Act 2008 to incentivise diversion from landfill.

"The levy should address all waste types by the ability to influence diversion of recoverable resources and should not focus solely or preferentially on municipal waste. A higher, broadly applied levy will have the greatest potential to divert waste from landfill,’’ the council’s submission said.