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In a shocking display of illegal dumping, professional fly-tippers have left a massive trail of debris stretching 100 feet through a woodland area. The cleanup is estimated to cost around £20,000.
This colossal 40-tonne pile of waste, found on Tinker Lane near Barnby Moor in Nottinghamshire, consists of both household and construction materials, equivalent to the contents of ten full lorry loads.
The Environment Agency has initiated an investigation to track down those accountable for this act, suspecting a criminal organization given the sheer magnitude of the fly-tipping incident.
Located just yards from the bustling A1 and in proximity to the National Trust’s Clumber Park, which spans 3,800 acres, Tinker Lane has become a site of concern due to this illegal dumping.
The enormous rubbish heap, first observed in January, adds to the increasing number of illegal fly-tipping cases occurring across the UK.
As the number of reported fly-tipping incidents has surged by 10 percent in a year, the government faces mounting pressure to crack down on these criminal activities.
Bassetlaw District Councillor Darrell Pulk said: ‘We don’t know who it is but with that scale of waste, we think it’s probably a criminal organsiation who has set themselves up.
‘It’s not someone in a transit van who has dumped some items randomly, this is a planned group.
‘It’s an organised business to take people’s waste and illegally dump it.
‘They’ll have false plates and people hide their identity and things. This particular venue is off the A1, they would’ve reversed up the drive in the dark and you wouldn’t see it.
A 40-tonne mountain of rubbish fly tipped on Tinker Lane off the A1 is being investigated by authorities
The long line of rubbish, which is roughly 20m (65ft) long, has been left in Tinker Lane, just off the A1 near Barnby Moor in Nottinghamshire
‘It started on the 19th of January. We went out to have a look, but the scale of the waste meant it was beyond our capacity.
‘There wasn’t any evidence for who dumped it. The Environmental Agency hasn’t found any toxin materials so far, so it’s going to be cleared up.’
Nottinghamshire County Council has estimated the clean-up of the waste will cost at least £20,000.
The Environment Agency said it is in the process of being cleared by private firm Veoila, with it expected to take several days.
Cllr Pulk added: ‘It’s a proper professional job to remove it. It’s not just a mattress on the side of the road.’
‘It’s going to cost in excess of £20,000 to move it because it’s 5ft deep, 10ft wide and over 100ft long.
‘The issue is if you get multiple waste deposited in an area at £20,000 a shot, it gets up to big money.’
The 40-ton heap includes household and building materials, which could fill 10 lorry loads
A spokesperson for the Environment Agency said: ‘We are investigating the illegal deposits of waste on Tinker Lane near Blythe, and we share the community’s disgust at these cases of environmental vandalism.
‘An estimated 40 tonnes of mixed building and general waste has been dumped on an adopted bridleway between the A1 and A634.’
Nottinghamshire County Council has been approached for comment.
The number of cases councils had to deal with last year jumped to 1.26 million in 2024/25, official figures show, up from the 1.15 million they had to deal with the previous year.
Britain’s biggest ever fly tip was discovered last year in a field next to the A34 in Oxfordshire.
The massive 500ft-long mountain of abandoned rubbish, prompted activists to condemn the ‘environmental catastrophe’.
In Newport in Gwent, a dual carriageway has become a fly-tipping hotspot and the town has been dubbed the ‘fly tipping capital of Britain.’
Residents said they are ‘at war’ and are constantly working to clean countryside areas around their homes which have become blighted by the filth.
Meanwhile, in Hertfordshire, a farmer was told he would have to foot a £40,000 bill after fly-tippers dumped 200 tons of rubbish on his land.
He was only saved when a fundraiser was set up to help him pay for the cleanup.