Litter survey finds Athlone 'clean to European norms'

Athlone remains 'Clean to European Norms', according to the final litter survey of 2023 by business group Irish Business Against Litter.

Athlone was ranked at number 22 in the survey of 40 towns and cities nationwide – identical to its standing in the mid-2023 report but a a drop in the town's showing from 16th place in the final survey of 2022 and from 18th place in 2021.

Elsewhere in the Midlands, Mullingar was deemed Cleaner than European Norms and claimed 5th spot – a record high, while Portlaoise and Tullamore were both Clean to European Norms in 18th and 23rd place respectively. For the first time since surveys began 20 years ago, no area was deemed ‘seriously littered’, with Maynooth claiming top spot. IBAL says the impending Deposit Return Scheme will improve cleanliness levels further but is calling for action on coffee cups.

The An Taisce report for Athlone stated: “With only one heavily littered site, Athlone would be further up the IBAL table if minor improvements were made to its many moderately littered sites. The residential area of Beechpark, Arcadia Retail Park and L1483 Plunkett Road approach were all in very good order.  Athlone Train Station, The Golden Island Recycle Centre (a much-improved site compared to just a few years ago) and the River Walk just missed out.  By far the most heavily littered site was Athlone Bus Station...”

While litter levels rose slightly nationwide, over 60% of towns surveyed were deemed clean in 2023, with Maynooth edging out Mallow and much improved Sligo to take the title of cleanest town.

Waterford was again the cleanest city, ahead of Galway. These were the only cities to be judged ‘clean’, with Cork City Centre improving to ‘moderately littered’ but Dublin falling to ‘littered’, alongside Limerick.

“There is some good news in our cities, however,” says Conor Horgan. “For years our worst performing areas were deemed either ‘litter blackspots’ or ‘seriously littered’. This baseline would seem to be changing, with ‘littered’ becoming the bottom tier. Cleanliness begets cleanliness, and there is reason to hope the improvement will continue in future years.”

A surprise finding of the IBAL study was the rise in coffee cup litter, which is now close to peak-Covid levels. Coffee cups were found at over 30% of the 500+ sites surveyed. “We are concerned at potential delays in introducing a coffee cup levy,” says Conor Horgan. “We believe this action is needed to stamp out a product which is out of step with the circular economy. Irrespective of how recyclable or compostable take-away cups are, these statistics show too many of them are ending up on our streets.” IBAL says Killarney has benefited from having banned single-use cups last year, a move embraced by the community.

IBAL welcomes the introduction next month of the Deposit Return Scheme as a potential game-changer in the fight against litter, much as the plastic bag levy was. The scheme will see consumers pay a deposit of 15 cent on cans and up to 25 cent on plastic bottles, refundable on their return.

“This latest survey shows these items to be present in just under half of the hundreds of sites we surveyed. This scheme will remove a large portion of this litter and bring about a significantly cleaner environment in 2024. While there may be some inconvenience for consumers, the prize is a very real, and a very immediate one," said Horgan.

There was another significant rise in the prevalence of disposable vapes, highlighted previously as an emerging source of litter. These were found in more than 10% of all sites covered.