Sunday, 3 February 2013

Should we target people to fix litter?

Today sees another guest post from Alex Serpo, editor for Inside Waste published by the Business Environment Network, Australia's leading waste journal.

As I did with Alex's last post "Reality stranger than fiction", I will present this unedited other than resolving a couple of hyperlinks. I will then offer a rounding out comment.

Litter at Cottesloe Beach, Western Australia. Source WA Today






Victoria recently released its 2012-2014 Litter Strategy, with a goal of reducing "littering behaviours" by 25%. But is this the right approach to fixing the problem?

The Victorian approach broadly follows the approach taken by all states, where educating the public, increasing litter fines (to painful levels) and providing more bins and monitoring at littering/dumping hot spots is the solution.

 Such solutions begin with an assumption – that people cause littering and so we should target people to fix the problem. Then all we have to do is get everyone to behave perfectly, and litter stops. This is a punitive approach to littering.

An interesting analogue can be drawn here to the legal system, which for years sought to prevent crime via the threat of incarceration or hefty fines. But when a large amount of data became available for analysis, soon legal minds found that these punishments had no effect on the levels of crime.

Rather, crime was primarily caused by a range of social factors including inequality, lack of opportunity, childhood trauma and being around others involved in illegal activity.

In other words, the causes of crime were found to be more social than personal, and prevention rather than punishment was more effective in reducing the problem. This modern approach assumes society is the problem and people involved in crime are the symptom.

If we were to apply the same approach to litter, then waste is the problem and people littering are the symptom. So to reduce litter, we need to reduce waste, particularly bulk disposable packaging and particularly at littering hotspots like beaches, shopping centres and railway stations.

An example could be a state-wide strategy to encourage and engage large producers of disposable waste (like shopping centre food courts and fast food restaurants) to use less disposable materials, while creating integration between disposable materials and disposal systems to optimise source separation.

This philosophy is notably absent from the Victorian Waste Strategy or any state littering strategy I have seen. Further, is there any link between education and action? Leading experts in behaviour change like Doug McKenzie-Mohr have highlighted that there is much more to changing behaviour than providing information.

So to my mind, the first two tiers of the Victorian Litter Strategy (education and enforcement) will likely have a limited effect on the problem. The third tier, increasing access to public place bins, I do agree with. 

However, this must be coupled with a concerted effort to reduce waste where littering is most likely to occur. Secondly, public place access to disposal and recycling bins must be lifted from its current low levels. We could also make an effort to make public place recycling more fun:



Finally, we have to accept that some littering is inevitable. Therefore, an effort should be made to substitute biodegradable materials where possible (such as the use of biodegradable plastics in liquid paper board cups), which in turn will reduce the amount of time litter remains in the environment.

I acknowledge the use of biodegradable materials may reduce or contaminate recycling volumes. However, many public places have few or no recycling facilities, and where they are available steams often become so contaminated they get sent to landfill.

If we are to retain a punitive approach to litter prevention, then the least we could do is make sure the funds from litter fines are invested into better public place disposal and recycling services.   


My two bob worth


I have no quarrel or substantive comment on what Alex writes, other than to note that there is a significant role for inventiveness and creativity. One such approach is Litterati with its "digital landfill". The idea is simple, and I'll let them describe:

The Digital Landfill is a photo gallery showcasing the different pieces of litter being picked up, and the overall impact of the movement. With geo-tagging, we're able to provide insight into problem areas and highlight the most active Litterati communities. Keyword tags on the photos help identify those brands and products that generate the most litter. We'll use this to work with companies and organizations to find environmentally friendly and sustainable solutions.

Adopted broadly, this could be an immense, crowd-sourced inventory of litter. It might help shake some of the key "brand-holders" into some real action.

Litterati. Source Litterati

2 comments:

  1. Yes, we at Zilch UK certainly see littering as a symptom of broken Britain: very little sense of community, no feeling of pride, a lack of self discipline and a not-my-problem attitude. And it's true that litter incidence correlates very closely with social deprivation.

    So the solution has got to employ both carrots and sticks and reach the minority of individuals who are responsible for the majority of the litter.

    Less packaging, biodegradable materials etc all have their place but let's not forget that dropping litter is a conscious and voluntary action that imposes a cost on the rest of society.

    There are of course also the smokers and gum chewers who feel that their byproducts are insignificant; true at the level of the single gum-stain or fag-end but not so when in their millions.

    Undoubtedly also, if everyone who didn't litter actually did their bit and picked up litter and confronted litterers (a challenge in itself) the tide might turn.

    So there's much to be done and we're going about doing it!

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    Replies
    1. That's a really nuanced approach. I too am a touch ambivalent about saying that we need to let the litterer off the hook totally. After all, they did make a conscious decision to do it. And there is only so much that can be done in dealing with manufacturers and infrastructure.

      The balance is that we need to keep it all in proportion. Should people attract stiffer penalties for littering than theft? Or damaging property? Or belting somebody when they are drunk? Should litter be downgraded relative to these offences?

      Or perhaps littering is actually much more important because it is a "gateway" to community. If people can't respect their environment, then what hope do we have in the rest of the problems you outline.

      I think Alex's main point is that the discussion must become broader than just people and their individual behaviour. It must include brand-owners in a meaningful way.

      The beauty of the new world is that we CAN have a proper discussion about this, and we CAN learn from what others experience.

      I'd love to hear more about your work as it unfolds.

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