Case Studies
A recent analysis for West Northamptonshire Council gave us the perfect opportunity to demonstrate the power of our uniquely multi-layered approach to WCA.
The data provided will enable this group of legacy councils to come together under one unitary authority to provide a unified waste and recycling system for the residents of West Northamptonshire.
West Northamptonshire Council is a new unitary authority formed from three former district and borough councils. Each legacy council has its own waste and recycling system:
As a result, residents were receiving different services across the area. The new council needs to bring all services together to create one unified service for the whole area.
The council wants to bring three legacy systems together into a single, fair service, understand what residents are currently putting in their bins and see how well existing recycling services were being used.
They also need to prepare for upcoming national changes such as Simpler Recycling, Deposit Return Scheme, Extended Producer Responsibility and the UK Emissions Trading Scheme.
Until now, decisions had been based on historic data and day-to-day operational experience. With current contractor contracts due to expire in 2028, what they needed was clear, up-to-date evidence. They wanted answers to simple but important questions:
In early 2024, West Northamptonshire commissioned Integrated Skills to carry out a full Waste Composition Analysis (WCA) across the area.

The brief was clear. Integrated Skills was asked to provide up-to-date composition data for residual (general) waste from:
The deliverables included detailed data tables in Excel, a clear report explaining the findings, an estimate of how much material could have been recycled using existing services and a first look at what Simpler Recycling, DRS, EPR and ETS might mean for the council.
Rather than picking a few “typical” streets, Integrated Skills uses the latest national socio-economic data (ONS Output Area Classifications, or OAC) to design the sample.
These OAC “supergroups” describe neighbourhood types such as:
By mapping West Northamptonshire’s profile and then mirroring it in the sample (around 250 households), the project provided a small but robust snapshot of the whole authority, similar in principle to an election exit poll.
This is one of Integrated Skills’ key strengths: combining mapping expertise with waste data so that a modest sampling exercise can truly reflect the wider population.
Over one week in February 2024, an Integrated Skills field team collected residual waste samples on normal collection days, ahead of the council’s crews.
For each sample area they:
Residents who asked about our activities were given a council-branded letter explaining the project, linking to further information on the council’s website.
Traditionally, many waste composition projects at HWRCs focus on a small, very detailed sample (for example, half a tonne), sorted item by item.
We took a different view.
From speaking to council officers and site staff, we knew that managers didn’t want fine detail on a tiny sample alone – they wanted to understand the whole load. So, for West Northamptonshire we used a two-step method at each of the three HWRC sites:
This “broad picture plus targeted detail” approach is simple but powerful.
It gives managers the insight they actually need:
Materials were sorted into 13 primary categories and 64 sub-categories agreed with the client, weighed and the data entered into prepared spreadsheets. This gave a detailed picture of the make-up of a “typical” residual bin, expressed as both percentages and kilograms per household per week.
Our analysis showed that West Northamptonshire residents with kerbside collections are setting out a moderate amount of residual waste each week. More importantly, over half of what is in the average general waste bin could have been recycled using existing services at the kerbside or at HWRCs.
The single biggest opportunity is food waste. Even though the council already provides a weekly food waste collection, food still makes up a large share of the residual bin by weight.
Other key findings included:
The study also looked at areas on fortnightly and three-weekly residual collection cycles. Set-out rates were higher where collections are three-weekly, and bins were typically fuller when presented. This suggests that collection frequency, and how it is communicated, has a real impact on how residents use the service.
The project included an equivalent of 100 households on communal residual services across three locations. These samples produced more residual waste per household than the average kerbside property and contained:
An additional communal recycling sample was also analysed. Although the total weight was modest, the level of contamination was high. For the council, this confirmed that flats and communal systems need specific attention. This may include clearer signage, more tailored communications and reviewing bin design and placement.
At all three HWRCs, the broad walkover plus targeted black bag method gave a clear picture of what is really in the residual stream. Across the sites, the team found:
For site managers, this insight can help shape layout and signage on the ground, staff training and “front-of-house” conversations with residents, and future decisions about charging, restrictions or targeted campaigns.
As part of the project, Integrated Skills used the data to provide an early view of how new national policies might affect West Northamptonshire. Using the sampled data, the report explored:
These policy-focused sections do not give final answers, as Government guidance and timelines are still developing, but they give the council a clear sense of scale and the areas where action will matter most.
The WCA project has given West Northamptonshire Council:
The findings are already helping the council shape its future strategy as it brings three legacy systems together into one.
Planned and potential actions include:
The data provided has already led to a highly successful scheme regarding textile recycling. There was a surprising level of textile material found in the black bag analysis, and the council are already tackling this head-on.
An arrangement with a local firm has made it possible for residents to book collection slots for textiles to be collected at kerbside. This began in April 2025 and uptake has been steadily increasing – no doubt encouraged by the company’s commitment to donating £90 to resident-selected local charities for each ton collected.
Vanessa Kelly, Waste Services and Projects Manager at West Northamptonshire Council, summed up the value of the project:
“In order to harmonise the service provided to our residents, we needed an in-depth Waste Composition Analysis to further our understanding of the various waste streams created by different areas of the community.
Having worked with Integrated Skills for nearly twenty years we knew they were the right choice. The team were fantastic; overcoming some data issues by speaking directly to residents, working like a well-oiled machine to meticulously separate and analyse the waste.
Their analysis included the contents of the black bags (a rarity in the sector), and this information was absolutely key. It informed how we move forward in a way that a basic WCA never could.
I can’t recommend them enough; lovely to work with, great at what they do and the services they offer are based on a deep understanding of what local authorities need.”
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