THE average Warrington resident generated hundreds of kilograms in household waste last year, figures suggest.

Environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy is urging people across England to try and reduce their packaging waste, after figures showed a rise in the amount of household rubbish generated nationally in the first year of the pandemic.

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs data shows Warrington Borough Council collected an average of 460.8kg of household waste per person from homes in the area in 2020-21 – up from 417.9kg the year before.

Warrington residents were more wasteful than the average person across England last year, with 420.6kg of household waste collected per person nationally on average, compared to 407.3kg in 2019-20.

Allison Ogden-Newton OBE, chief executive of Keep Britain Tidy, said: “We all have a part to play in making changes that will limit global warming and stem the rising tide of plastic that is choking our oceans – we must do better.

“Think about what you buy, what you consume and what you will do with the packaging waste that you create and make the right choices for our environment.”

Around 44 per cent of household waste in Warrington was sent for reuse, recycling or composting in 2020-21 – down from 47 per cent in 2019-20.

Greenpeace said the considerable rise in national household waste is worrying, and that the figures likely underestimate the total volume of plastic thrown away.

Nina Schrank, senior campaigner at Greenpeace UK, said the Covid pandemic will have contributed, with people receiving more deliveries and disposing of more waste at home – but said too much packaging is sold already.

Resources and Waste Minister Jo Churchill said local authorities faced unprecedented challenges to keep rubbish collections running during the pandemic

She added: “Recycling and reusing more of our waste is key to helping us protect the environment for future generations.

“Despite a highly challenging year, less than eight per cent of local authority collected waste went to landfill, while food waste recycling from households increased by 12 per cent.”