Beverage Container Return Scheme

A Return Right machine where people can deposit their beverage containers.

The Beverage Container Return Scheme is a container refund scheme by the Government of Singapore. The scheme is intended to reduce waste in Singapore while improving recycling rates.

History

2019–2023: Pilot project and the Recycle N Save initiative

In January 2018, a pilot project was launched at NTUC FairPrice outlets at Waterway Point, Yew Tee Point, and Bukit Merah Central where people can recycle used cans and bottles at reverse vending machines. The project was a collaborative effort by Fraser and Neave, NTUC Fairprice, Frasers Centrepoint Malls, and Incon Green Singapore, the supplier of the machines. In return of the used cans and bottles, a person would receive vouchers. Other than the three outlets, Incon had 10 other machines deployed across Singapore.[1] A 2018 study by Singapore Environment Council found that Singapore uses an estimate of 467 million polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles.[2]

On 31 October 2019, it was announced that the pilot project would evolve into a National Environment Agency-backed initiative, Recycle N Save, where 50 reverse vending machines would be deployed in batches after the public responded favourably to the pilot project. NEA stated that the initiative was in line with the government's Zero Waste Masterplan, tackling packaging waste as one of the priority waste streams,[3] as it has high generation and low recycling rate.[2] In 2019, of the 930,000 tonnes of plastic waste thrown out, only 37,000 tonnes were recycled.[2] The previous machines were replaced with ones that were of larger capacity which held up to 600 aluminium cans and plastic bottles and were fitted with compactor to flatten the returned packaging. However, feedback on the ground was that not all packaging was accepted as the machine could not recognise barcodes on some.[3] The rewards given in the initiative were expanded to include vouchers and credits from other organisations such as Anywheel, CapitaLand malls, ActiveSG, and Sentosa.[2]

On 30 December 2020, it was reported that about 4 million containers were returned since the onset of the initiative.[4]

The initiative continued to expand in 2021 with waste management provider Alba W&H Smart City deploying five more vending machines in Jurong area.[5] At the same time, NEA was reportedly pushing for an implementation of a Deposit Refund Scheme (DRS) framework in 2022, building on the popularity of the initiative in Singapore thus far, and also abroad.[5] Minister for Sustainability and the Environment Grace Fu stated in a 2021 budget debate in the parliament that the deposit refund scheme for beverage containers would be legislated by 2022.[6] The public efforts had caught the attention of global companies, such as Norwegian Tomra, which developed the world's first fully automated reverse vending machine in 1972,[7] and Swedish RVM Systems, another manufacturer, to set up offices in Singapore and distribute their machines in Singapore.[8]

2023-present: Legislation and nationwide rollout

Eligible bottles have a "10₵ SG return" Deposit Mark next to the product barcode.

The Beverage Container Return Scheme was first announced in 2020, with a public consultation phase in September 2022. It is part of the Resource Sustainability (Amendment) Bill that was passed in Parliament on 22 March 2023.[9] Initially scheduled to launch in April 2025, the scheme was delayed by a year to April 2026 to allow more time for beverage producers and retailers to implement the scheme. A company, the Beverage Container Return Scheme Limited (BCRS Ltd) was also established to design and operate the scheme.[10]

The scheme is officially launched on 1 April 2026.[11] BCRS Ltd had deployed 1,070 reverse vending machines, branded as Return Right, across the island for the initial launch.[12] The scheme requires consumer to pay a deposit of 10 cents for each PET bottle or aluminium can bought at retail. The deposit is passed along back to BCRS Ltd through the supply chain, with the producer of the drinks depositing the amount. The consumer would then return the bottle or can at the Return Right machines to reclaim the deposit from BCRS Ltd.[13] Eligible bottles and cans are labelled with a 10-cent Deposit Mark.[14] The availability of eligible bottles and cans was limited at the start of the scheme as retailers were still replenishing their shelves with stock purchased before the mark was printed on the products, as well as authorities allowing an transition period between April and September 2026 for retailers to sell the ineligible products.[15]

References

  1. ^ Charles, Raffaella Nathan (9 January 2018). "'Reverse vending machine' to encourage recycling launched at Waterway Point". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  2. ^ a b c d "More reverse vending machines to encourage recycling of plastic drink bottles and aluminium cans". The Straits Times. 30 June 2020. Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  3. ^ a b Liu, Vanessa (31 October 2019). "50 vending machines that accept used drink containers for recycling to be rolled out islandwide by March". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  4. ^ Begum, Shabana (30 December 2020). "Nearly 4m drink containers collected in recycling drive". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  5. ^ a b Wong, Shiying (1 March 2021). "Jurong to get five more vending machines to boost recycling". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2026.
  6. ^ Begum, Shabana (4 March 2021). "Budget debate: Refund-based recycling of bottles and cans to be legislated by 2022". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2026 – via Newslink.
  7. ^ Begum, Shabana (1 April 2022). "Norway firm latest to roll out rewards-for-cans machines". The Straits Times. pp. B3. Retrieved 3 April 2026 – via Newslink.
  8. ^ Begum, Shabana (25 April 2022). "Swedish firm eyeing S'pore base to deploy 'reverse vending machines' for bottle recycling". The Straits Times. Retrieved 3 April 2026 – via Newslink.
  9. ^ Ng, Abigail (21 March 2023). "10-cent deposit for bottled, canned drinks: What you need to know about the beverage container return scheme". CNA. Retrieved 1 April 2026.
  10. ^ Lim, Rachel (31 July 2024). "Beverage container return scheme launch pushed back by a year". CNA. Retrieved 1 April 2026.
  11. ^ Koh, Wan Ting (1 April 2026). "Singapore's beverage container return scheme starts Apr 1: What you need to know". CNA. Retrieved 1 April 2026.
  12. ^ "Drink containers without deposit mark cannot be returned via machine; recycle it, urges BCRS". AsiaOne. 8 April 2026. Retrieved 25 April 2026.
  13. ^ "Singapore's beverage container return scheme starts Apr 1: What you need to know". CNA. Retrieved 25 April 2026.
  14. ^ "Singapore's beverage container return scheme begins". The Straits Times. 1 April 2026. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 25 April 2026.
  15. ^ "Beverage Container Return Scheme to start on April 1 with 10-cent return deposit". AsiaOne. 3 January 2026. Retrieved 25 April 2026.

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