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23 Nov 2025 11:26
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  •   Home > News > International

    Authorities look to underworld for answers after massive illegal rubbish dump sparks outcry in England

    British authorities are scrambling to work out how an estimated 100 tonnes of garbage could be dumped in plane sight, and they're looking to the underworld for answers.


    When a mountain of rubbish appeared in the English countryside, everybody had questions.

    Some locals claim the trash was first spotted in September. Others say it could have been July. Wait, was a digger there in March?

    Trucks dropped everything off at night. Or was it the day? Now the dump is at least 60 — no, 150 — metres long. And 10 high!

    They reckon garbage is "the new narcotics", could a criminal gang be to blame?

    And who should clean it up? The army? The police? What about the council?

    Incensed environmentalists have described this festering fly-tip as a "biodiversity nuclear bomb" that was dropped in plain sight over the course of a few weeks.

    Working out who's responsible looks set to take a lot longer. And that, some say, is a bigger problem.

    The Oxfordshire region, in England's affluent south-east, is known for its chocolate-box villages, rolling green hills and ancient university.

    Lately, though, it's a sprawling illegal rubbish dump that's been hogging the headlines.

    Images of it have sparked an outcry around the country, and drawn unflattering comparisons with the "third world" online.

    As one post on social media mused: "How has this been allowed to happen?"

    The attention has got authorities scrambling, and residents seething.

    "I really can't believe its been happening on our doorstep and nothing's been done about it. I'm furious," local woman Monica Notarmarco, who's lived in the area for 30 years, told the ABC.

    But this isn't the first time industrial amounts of garbage have turned up somewhere they shouldn't in Blighty. In fact, it's big business.

    A UK parliamentary committee began investigating "waste crime" in September, and has identified multiple problem areas around the country.

    Baroness Shas Sheehan, the politician leading this probe, said at least 38 million tonnes of rubbish was disposed of illegally in England every year.

    "The scale of the issue really surprised and shocked us," she said.

    Baroness Sheehan's inquiry was told criminal gangs had a stranglehold on the industry.

    It's a simple scam: crooks posing as a legitimate operation get paid to remove trash. Instead of taking it to legal landfill facilities — which incurs fees — they do dirty deals to dump it somewhere else.

    Baroness Sheehan said mobsters were exploiting a cycle of incompetence and "buck passing" between multiple authorities.

    She accused local councils of being reluctant to act, and said police were "not doing what they should have been".

    The UK's Environmental Agency (EA) — which is responsible for regulating waste — was "a complete failure" on the issue, she said.

    "This is happening in broad daylight," Baroness Sheehan said.

    "It's very attractive to serious organised crime groups because it's a low-risk, very high-profit enterprise for them."

    Gangs had become so prolific in dumping waste illegally, former EA boss Sir James Bevan described it as "the new narcotics" in a 2016 interview with the Guardian.

    These strong words, critics contend, had no impact. Since he said them, the problem has spiralled.

    The Oxfordshire dump is somewhat obscured behind trees on private land between a highway and the River Cherwell.

    Authorities say they first became aware of it in July, but couldn't obtain a court order to close the site until October 23.

    The pile is now estimated to be around 150 metres long and up to 6m high in some places.

    "I share the public's complete disgust at this shocking case of environmental crime," Anna Burns, an EA director, said this week, adding the organisation was pursuing "several lines of inquiry".

    With the help of police, the local council and other agencies, "we are hunting down those responsible", she said.

    So far, no arrests have been made. The land owner has been issued a cease-and-desist letter.

    British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer this week said "all available powers" would be used to ensure whoever was behind the illegal fly-tip paid to clean it up.

    The local municipality has estimated the cost of removing the rubbish could be more than its entire annual budget. There's even been suggestions the army may need to help.

    A solution can't come soon enough for residents in the nearby village of Kidlington, who are now not only living next to the issue but sometimes smelling it too.

    "Nobody cares about the environment," lamented Ann Crane, 90, who's lived in the area for more than six decades.

    "The government says it cares, but it doesn't. Nobody seems to think it's important, and we're drowning and burning ourselves to death, aren't we?"

    As the pile continues to fester, with no end in site, there are concerns the rubbish may seep into the River Cherwell and make its way downstream towards London.

    "This is like a biodiversity nuclear bomb that's been dropped," said Laura Reineke, from environmental group Friends of the Thames.

    She's particularly pessimistic about the situation.

    "I think this sort of thing ... is a metaphor for the country as a whole at the moment," she said.


    ABC




    © 2025 ABC Australian Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved

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