An Taisce conduct survey for IBAL.

Concern over litter in Tipp highlighted in survey

The latest litter survey by business group Irish Business Against Litter ((IBAL) of shows Clonmel has lost its clean status, slipping from 22nd to 36th spot in the ranking of 40 towns and cities. The town was deemed ‘moderately littered’. Sligo finished atop the IBAL table for the first time in a study which showed that city areas in particular cleaned up in 2025.

The An Taisce report for Clonmel stated:

With just two top ranking sites out of a total of ten sites surveyed, this has been a disappointing drop for Clonmel. The presence of three heavily littered sites will always bring down a town’s ranking. Dungarvan Approach Road, residential area of Mountain View and Bottle Bank at West Gate Car Park were all heavily littered. Poppyfield Retail Park was one of two top-ranking sites – this wasn’t just very good with regards to litter but exceptionally freshly presented and maintained, with an area dedicated to ‘Managed for Biodiversity’.

The number of towns deemed clean last year rose to 28, with Sligo finishing ahead of Leixlip, Westport and Monaghan. An Taisce, who conduct the surveys on behalf of IBAL, lauded the winning town for its consistently strong performance in recent years.

Waterford reclaimed its customary accolade of Ireland’s cleanest city, ahead of Galway. Cork City Centre was also clean. While urban areas still dominate the lower reaches of the rankings, 10 of the 13 surveyed showed an improvement in cleanliness in 2025. Galvone in Limerick achieved clean status for the first time, having been branded “seriously littered” in past years.

“The most pleasing finding of 2025 was the progress made in socially disadvantaged areas,” explains Mr Horgan. “Even areas at the foot of our rankings have significantly lower litter levels than a year ago. Dublin City Centre and North Inner City, while still littered, are cases in point. The investment being made by Dublin City Council seems to be already paying fruit, and we are set to see further progress in 2026 if the Council comes good on its promise of replacing bags with bins across the city. This could be a landmark year in the fight against litter.”

There was a notable fall-off in the number of sites with large accumulations of litter or subject to dumping. “This continues a very welcome trend we’ve seen in recent surveys and credit must go to local authorities for ridding our environment of these litter blackspots,” comments Mr Horgan. This was the first IBAL survey where no bottle bank was deemed a litter blackspot.

The survey revealed that the Deposit Return Scheme continues to have a positive impact on the cleanliness of our towns and cities, with a 10% drop in the prevalence of cans and plastic bottles compared to the previous year. These two types of litter are now 60% less common than when the scheme was introduced in early 2024.

Coffee cups remained one of the most commonly found forms of litter and was evident in one fifth of all sites surveyed. “A real disappointment in a generally positive year has been the likely collapse of coffee cup schemes in towns such as Killarney,” says Mr Horgan. “It is apparent that such schemes will only work with statutory backing. As our data today bears out, without Government intervention coffee cups will remain an unsightly and entirely unnecessary blot on the landscape across our towns. The prevarication from Government on the issue is striking - a levy was promised all of four years ago – and sends out a worrying signal. Weaning ourselves off single-use coffee cups should not be such a big deal.”

The prevalence of disposable vapes, which are set to be outlawed over the course of 2026, was unchanged.