PEI

Increase to P.E.I. bottle deposit and refund rates delayed until fall, minister says

The bottle and can deposit will increase to 20 cents, and 15 of that would be refunded back to customers when the empties are returned.

Change was planned for August, but province now says it requires legislative ammendment

A can on the side of the road as a vehicle whizzes by.
Environment Minister Steve Myers says increasing the refund would reduce the amount of bottles and cans left in ditches and on roadsides across the Island. (Rob LeClair/CBC)

The plan to increase P.E.I.'s bottle and can deposit — and the refund Islanders can get for returning them — has hit a snag.

The change would see deposits on bottles and cans double from 10 cents to 20, and the refund for returning them triple from five to 15 cents.

"So a garbage bag now that you get $5 for, you'll get $15 for it," said Environment, Energy and Climate Action Minister Steven Myers.

Myers previously said the change would happen by August. Now, the earliest it can become a reality is November, he said.

"It's unfortunate, but we can't make the change until we go back to the legislature."

Why P.E.I. residents will have to wait until fall to get a larger refund on bottles and cans

14 days ago
Duration 1:25
The P.E.I. government's plan to increase the deposit and refund on bottles and cans won't happen this summer as planned. CBC’s Jackie Sharkey talked to Environment Minister Steven Myers to find out when Islanders can expect to see that larger return on their recyclables.

Myers said he found out in June that the change wouldn't be able to happen through simple regulation changes, but rather through an ammendment to P.E.I.'s Beverage Containers Act. That change would have to be proposed and and approved by MLAs in the provincial legislature, which doesn't resume until November.

"I told [staff] to go back through all the legal channels to look at what other ways can we do it. Can we make a policy change? Can we make a regulation change? What other changes can we make?" he said.

"Because I want this to happen right away."

But that search didn't provide the department with any alternatives, he said.

"In some cases I can do a [regulation] change.... But this one has to go back to the floor of the legislature." 

Steven Myers stands against a backdrop of flags at the provincial legislature.
Myers says he will enact the legislation as soon as it's approved in the legislature this fall. (Rick Gibbs/CBC)

Once the act is changed, the government would administer the remaining five cents from the deposit, the same amount it does now. Myers said the majority of that, 2.8 cents, goes to the depots that return the bottles to recycling plants.

He said government puts the rest toward a fund that is distributed to wildlife organizations across Prince Edward Island.

'Beyond disappointed' with delay

Myers said the reasoning behind the proposed change is because bottles and cans aren't getting returned at the rate they once were.

Several garbage bags are pictured full of water bottles and beer cans.
Myers says the P.E.I. government wants to curb littering by incentivizing returns. (Brian Higgins/CBC)

"I think you don't see as many people cleaning up the ditches as they once did and collecting the cans and bottles," he said. 

In the meantime, Myers said bottle return depots have seen a decrease in traffic as some Islanders hoard their recyclables while they wait for the refund to increase.

"There's two young guys down in Lorne Valley who are collecting cans, and I think they have 11,000 or 12,000 cans collected now," Myers said. "I heard from up west, I ran into a guy who told me his sons had 55,000 cans saved for this."

The minister said he's planning to meet with operators of bottle return depots to discuss the situation, but he doesn't think he'll be able to change anything until the legislature resumes.

"I can either pull the rug out from underneath all these people who have been collecting bottles out of the ditches, or we can sit and wait for this to happen," he said.

Myers said he's "beyond disappointed" with the delay, but he remains committed to making the change as soon as possible. He said he would enact the new legislation as soon as it's passed in the legislature.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Victoria Walton

Associate Producer

Victoria Walton is an associate producer at CBC Prince Edward Island. She previously worked at The Coast and spent nearly a decade in Halifax before moving to the Island. She has a bachelor of journalism from the University of King's College. You can reach her at victoria.walton@cbc.ca.

With files from Jackie Sharkey