Naas & Kilkenny named Ireland’s cleanest towns in IBAL litter survey

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Conor Horgan of IBAL

The final Irish Business Against Litter (IBAL) Survey for 2024 has named eleven towns in Ireland that are cleaner than European norms, including key tourist destinations Galway, Kilkenny and Killarney.

Thirteen others met European litter standards. Areas such as Dublin North Inner City were classified as “seriously littered,” indicating significant issues with littering in those regions.

Overall litter levels were on a par with 12 months ago. Naas finished atop the rankings for the 3rd time in 4 years, ahead of 5-time victor Kilkenny and Monaghan town. An Taisce, who conduct the surveys on behalf of IBAL, praised Naas on an achievement ‘that didn’t happen overnight” and cited the recently opened Naas Plaza among many sites that were “spotless”. 

In all 60pc of the towns and cities surveyed were deemed ‘clean’. Galway replaced Waterford as the cleanest city, but city areas occupied all but one of the bottom 10 places in the IBAL league table, despite some improvement in Limerick and Mahon in Cork. ‘Littered’ Ballybane in Galway and Dublin City Centre deteriorated year-on-year, while Dublin North Inner City was the only area to be branded ‘seriously littered’.  

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According to the inspectors, “vast quantities of loose food and alcohol related litter had been discarded” near Emmet Road in Dublin, while Sherrard Street Upper in the Inner City suffered from “bags of domestic rubbish, the contents of which have been ripped open and scattered about”. Another blackspot was Crinian Strand, a short stretch of residential housing “with large household items e.g. mattresses / furniture discarded along the pavement, along with at least a dozen black sacks of rubbish – the contents of which were being scavenged by seagulls.” 

The survey also a near-50pc fall in the prevalence of plastic bottles and cans in the 500+ sites monitored since the Deposit Return Scheme was introduced last year and a a further fall in the number of sites within cities and towns that were deemed ‘litter blackspots’, which suggests that local authorities were generally more effective in tackling urban dumping and in addressing sites that IBAL had previously highlighted.

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Conor Horgan of IBAL shared. “These findings strengthen the case for the ban on bag bins in Dublin City. We’ve been saying for years that the use of bags for waste collection has been an impediment to progress in the Capital on a number of fronts. The ban can bring about a step change, but its impact will hinge on proper enforcement.” 

“We are definitely seeing cans and bottles disappear from our streets, which is very welcome – not only are they unsightly, but the bottles contribute to the very real problem of plastic pollution. However, it is clear from our survey that people continue to discard a wide range of litter types with flagrant disregard for their surroundings,” says Conor Horgan. Sweet wrappers and fast-food wrappers were the most common litter types, ahead of plastic bags and coffee cups, which were present in over 20pc of sites. 

“The DRS was one of a number of structural measures broached by the last government as part of its environmental agenda, with knock-on benefits in terms of litter. A ban on disposable vapes and a coffee cup levy were others.

“The need for such measures is evident in the stubbornly low penetration levels of refillable coffee cups and the proliferation of highly damaging vape litter, which cannot be recycled. If we are to see sustainable improvement nationwide, it is important that the incoming regime maintain the momentum on anti-litter legislation.”

Killarney, which outlawed disposable coffee cups in 2023, was one of the most improved towns last year, rising from 14th to 4th in the rankings. Given the evident success of this initiative in Killarney, it is perplexing why other towns have not yet followed suit.”

Irish Business against Litter was founded by Tom Cavanagh from Fermoy in 1996 and has been campaigning for cleaner towns and anti litter policies such as the charge for plastic bags in 2002.

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