Entrepreneurial partnership launched to tackle Scotland’s waste tyres

Entrepreneurial Scotland has joined with the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA) to form a new strategic partnership aimed at eliminating the problem of waste tyres as an environmental issue in Scotland.

With approximately 100 tyres turned into waste every 15 minutes in Scotland, the new partnership, announced at the “Global Tyre Challenge” event today, sets in motion an ambitious challenge for entrepreneurs to find sustainable new business opportunities for waste tyres over the next five years.

Alongside this, SEPA has committed to developing a specific Sector Plan that will set targets and actions to directly tackle waste tyres and the criminal behaviours, such as illegal dumping, that the industry can attract.



Today’s event also marks Earth Overshoot Day for 2017, the date by which humanity’s resource consumption for the year exceeds the Earth’s capacity, highlighting that we are now running at a resource deficit for the rest of the year.

The initiative in partnership with Entrepreneurial Scotland will work hand in hand with the Saltire Fellowship Programme, an intensive leadership development opportunity for Scotland’s most ambitious and entrepreneurially-minded individuals.

This year’s cohort of Saltire Fellows will explore new ventures that can actively turn waste tyres into viable business opportunities. Working closely with entrepreneurs and those immersed in entrepreneurial thinking will significantly enhance SEPA’s own traditional approaches to regulation and provide proactive solutions to some of the biggest environmental challenges facing Scotland’s economy.

Speaking at the announcement, SEPA’s chief executive, Terry A’hearn, said: “The most prosperous businesses in the 21st century will embed the importance of a circular economy at the heart of their operations and will be purpose driven to seek opportunities which bring profitability through environmental innovation.

“The partnership between SEPA and Entrepreneurial Scotland taps into the most creative assets at our disposal to find some truly innovative approaches to reduce or reuse the number of waste tyres circulating in our economy. By working together, we have the potential to create economic opportunities that provide tangible benefits for environmental and social success in Scotland.

“I am hopeful that today marks the start of a unique and powerful collaboration which will help move the date of Earth Overshoot Day further back each year and in doing so make our planet more resilient for future generations.”

The “Global Tyre Challenge” brought together leading waste experts, business innovators and entrepreneurial leaders with SEPA, Entrepreneurial Scotland and Zero Waste Scotland today at the University of Strathclyde’s Technology and Innovation Centre. To kick-start the initiative a breakfast session explored the global scale of the current waste tyre problem, followed by the partnership announcement and a Q&A panel. The event culminated with a workshop for practitioners and the tyre industry, aimed at giving context to the challenge and providing powerful ideas which the Saltire Fellows can carry forward into the upcoming 2017 Fellowship Programme, as they embark on the problem solving phase.

James Stuart, managing director of Entrepreneurial Scotland, said: “Partnering with SEPA is a fantastic example of how collaboration can solve real challenges and support Scotland in becoming the most entrepreneurial society in the world.

“Our Saltire Fellows are without a doubt the right candidates to take on this challenge. In the coming months this year’s cohort will spend time at Babson College in Boston and be immersed in entrepreneurial thinking. That entrepreneurial thinking will then focus on viable solutions to combat the waste tyre challenge.

“The businesses of tomorrow will need to be much more resource efficient going forward and we believe that entrepreneurial thinking will be the key to unlocking Scotland’s potential and the way to successfully address some of our, and the world’s, biggest challenges.”

Share icon
Share this article: