Young environmentalist’s two-year mission to save plastic containers from landfill earns government support
A determined six-year-old boy from Hampshire has secured a commitment from Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer to tackle the recycling of plastic sweet tubs after his remarkable environmental campaign captured the attention of Parliament.
Teddy, from Netley, spent two years collecting more than 2,500 plastic confectionery containers that would otherwise have ended up in landfill. His efforts earned him recognition at Prime Minister’s Questions last Wednesday, where MPs across the political divide waved and smiled as his local Conservative MP Paul Holmes championed his cause.

“Teddy is a self-professed eco warrior, on a mission to change the world,” Mr Holmes, MP for Hamble Valley, told the Commons. “He started out by saving thousands of plastic chocolate and sweet tubs from landfill, because they’re not currently recyclable.”
Government Minister to Meet Young Campaigner
Sir Keir Starmer praised Teddy’s achievement as “incredible” and committed to arranging a meeting between the youngster and the relevant government minister to discuss making the tubs recyclable. “Many of us struggle for a whole lifetime to make an impact on government policy – Teddy is already, aged six, having an impact,” the Prime Minister said.
The young environmentalist, who cites Sir David Attenborough as his hero, began his campaign after discovering that the plastic tubs couldn’t be recycled through his family’s regular household collection. While some regions in the UK can recycle these containers through kerbside collection, Hampshire currently doesn’t offer this service.

Community-Wide Effort
Teddy’s initiative extended far beyond his own household. He collected tubs from neighbours’ homes and bins, wrote letters to his school, and worked with his mother Laura to create posters for local businesses. His grandfather even visited the local waste disposal site to request that discarded tubs be saved.
The campaign gained momentum through social media, where Teddy described himself as an “eco warrior on a mission” and highlighted the alarming number of tubs ending up in landfills or oceans.
Tangible Results
In March, Teddy received a special reward for his efforts: a “buddy bench” for his school playground, crafted from the recycled plastic tubs he had collected. The purple bench features a plaque reading: “With gratitude to Teddy for your exceptional contributions” from Greene King, Co-cre8, DC Polymers, and Macmillan Cancer Support.
His collection formed part of Greene King’s Tub2Pub initiative, which has collected over 5,000kg of plastic – almost 50,000 tubs – over the past two years, raising £11,308 for Macmillan Cancer Support. The scheme allows customers to drop off clean plastic sweet and biscuit tubs at 1,600 Greene King managed pubs nationwide.
Manufacturing Process
Teddy recently toured a recycling facility to see how his collected plastic is transformed into outdoor furniture. The tubs are shredded, combined with UV additives to prevent sun damage, then heated and moulded into planks that are crafted into furniture.
Georgia Harlow from Co-cre8 noted that Teddy “embodies the public’s enthusiasm for recycling” and serves as a “remarkable example of what can be accomplished”. She added that the bench “illustrates how he has aided in transforming used plastic tubs, which might have otherwise been considered waste, into a valuable product that will benefit the school for years to come”.
Teddy celebrating in a warehouse filled with thousands of collected sweet tubs including Heroes, Quality Street, and Celebrations containers. The six-year-old has spent two years gathering over 2,500 plastic tubs to prevent them reaching landfill
