THE proportion of rubbish recycled by Halton has fallen in two years, according to data from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.

In 2016-2017, the council recycled or composted 27,623 tonnes of all waste, about 45% of the total collected.

These figures are poorer than two years ago, when 48% of the rubbish was recycled.

The data includes the rubbish made up of everyday items that are disposed of by the public at home or on the go.

England recycled on average 42.7% of the waste produced over the last year.

Incineratory plants burnt 46% of the rubbish produced in the council. The vast majority of it was sent to specialist Energy-from-Waste (EfW) power plants as fuel to generate heat and electricity.

Halton sent 5,318 tonnes of waste to landfills in 2016-2017 - about 9% of the total.

The Government aims to recycle half of the household waste by 2020 nationally, cutting to 35% the proportion of rubbish going to landfill.

These targets are part of a new strategy drawn up by the European Union and backed up by Theresa May's cabinet in April.

A report launched last week in the House of Lords stoked the debate on burning waste in Britain.

Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat politicians warned about the negative impact on health of the 'incinerator boom' and called on the Government to take oversight on the industry and introduce an incineration tax.

The research revealed that harmful particles released by incinerators in England last year were equivalent to the emissions of more than a quarter-of-a-million 40-tonne lorries travelling 75,000 miles (120,000 km) per year.

Shlomo Dowen, national coordinator of United Kingdom Without Incineration Network (UKWIN), reckons that many materials which could be recycled are being incinerated.

He said: "Unfortunately councils are reacting too slowly to the growing public demand for more recycling and less incineration. The introduction of an incineration tax would send a clear message to councils and businesses that incineration is not the way forward. Money raised through an incineration tax can be spent on better local recycling and re-use schemes.

"Across the UK there is more than 19 million tonnes of residual waste treatment capacity operational or under construction, but forecasts indicate that by 2030 there will only be around 10 million tonnes of residual waste available for treatment.

"This means that we are already facing an overcapacity of incineration that is harming recycling. The real choice is not between incineration and landfill, but between incineration and recycling".

Baroness Jones, the Green Party member of the House of Lords, said: "We need to build more of our own infrastructure in order to recycle and deal with our own waste.

"The ban on recycled waste going to China has inevitably lead to a UK pile up and that could bring forward the moment when our recycling gets treated as a fuel, rather than a valuable resource.

"Post Brexit we need to come up with new rules that ensure that a certain proportion of material in key products includes recycled materials. This would create a market for the recycled goods and encourage industry to invest."