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  • Vicarage Lane, Hailsham, BN27 2AX. 01323 443322
  • Pine Grove, Crowborough, TN6 1DH. 01892 653311
Last Updated : 14.01.2008

What happens to the materials collected?

Bin for green waste

This is taken directly to a local farm in Isfield for composting. After delivery by the Council, a local company, KPS Composting Services Ltd, deals with the actual composting. They shred the material and pile it into windrows which are turned regularly. After 12 weeks it is screened to remove any plastic and pieces of wood. It is then ready to be used by the farmer as a soil conditioner.

Composted green waste from CROWN households is now also available to the public. We are working hard with our partners KPS Composting to see how we can make the material collected on the CROWN service available for the public as a soil conditioner. In the interim there is a modest opportunity for householders to bag it up themselves at the following locations:

Prices start at approximately £2 per bag. 

Red and blue caddy

All recyclable materials are delivered initially to Wealden District Council's Materials Reclamation Facility (MRF) in Uckfield. Here they are sorted, any contaminants are removed, and they are bulked up prior to being transported to the works where they are recycled into new products.

Remaining waste from your landfill bin

The remaining waste is taken to one of the two landfill sites in East Sussex, either Beddingham near Lewes, or Pebsham between Bexhill and Hastings, which are run by East Sussex County Council's Contractors, Veolia Environmental Services.  It is tipped into disused quarry workings and buried. One of the problems with landfill sites is the emission of landfill gas, which contributes towards global warming. Both landfill sites have gas extraction systems which capture up to half the gas generated and turn it into electricity on site.