Recycling rate
61%
Total waste per person
471kg
Residual waste per person
182kg

Recycling service

Newport City Council (NCC) provides a weekly kerbside-sort collections service for recycling. This means it collects recyclable materials in separate containers.

It collects:

  • food waste every week, from a brown caddy using caddy liners provided by the Council for free;
     
  • dry recycling every week,
     
    • from a green box for glass bottles and jars, and small electrical items,
       
    • from a reusable red bag for metal cans, tins, aerosols and foil, plastic bottles, pots, tubs and trays, and food and drink cartons (such as Tetra Pak and crisp tubes), and
       
    • from a reusable blue bag for cardboard and paper; and
       
  • clothing every week, in residents' own single-use plastic bags (to keep the textiles dry).

NCC also collects:

  • nappy and hygiene waste every two weeks in single-use purple sacks, if residents have registered for this service;
     
  • non-recyclable waste every three weeks from a black wheelie bin; and
     
  • garden waste every three weeks between March and November, from a green wheelie bin with orange lid.

Residents can recycle batteries at the Household Waste Recycling Centre in Maesglas, Wastesavers Reuse Centre, and at local libraries, in partnership with ERP UK Ltd.

The Council provides a bulky household item collections service for large items. To find out how much this service costs, or to book a collection, residents should visit the Council’s website. Wastesavers Reuse Centre will also collect good quality furniture.

The Council manages one Household Waste Recycling Centre in the county. Residents must book an appointment before they visit the site.

Visit Newport City Council's website.

Household waste recycling centres

Newport Household Waste Recycling Centre, Maesglas

Newport Household Waste Recycling Centre, Maesglas
51.5671, -3.00384

In total
All materials
43k
tonnes of waste was recycled
Savings
Selected materials
£3m
saved by recycling instead of disposal
Climate change impact
Selected materials
16k
tonnes of CO2 emissions was avoided

Top 5 UK recycling destinations

1
Viridor
Castle Cary, England
4,333t
Organic Waste
2
Biogen
Aberdare, Wales
4,160t
Organic Waste
3
Recresco Ltd
Cwmbran, Wales
3,826t
Glass
4
UPM Kymmene Ltd
Shotton, Wales
2,848t
Paper
5
1,970t
Organic Waste

Where does Wales’ recycling go?

Top countries (selected materials) 2016/17

Glass

Glass icon

Amount recycled
3,908t
CO2 avoided
2,951t
Estimated disposal saving
£441,606
Reported as exported
0%

Top destinations

Metal

Metal icon

Amount recycled
1,767t
CO2 avoided
4,487t
Estimated disposal saving
£199,624
Reported as exported
23%

Top destinations

Organic Waste

Organic waste icon

Amount recycled
11,572t
CO2 avoided
579t
Estimated disposal saving
£1,307,610
Reported as exported
0%

Top destinations

Paper

Paper and cardboard icon

Amount recycled
7,080t
CO2 avoided
3,873t
Estimated disposal saving
£799,994
Reported as exported
37%

Top destinations

Plastic

Plastic icon

Amount recycled
2,844t
CO2 avoided
1,524t
Estimated disposal saving
£321,326
Reported as exported
6%

Top destinations

Textiles

Textil icon

Amount recycled
333t
CO2 avoided
1,943t
Estimated disposal saving
£37,669
Reported as exported
75%

Top destinations