Fly-tipped waste is discovered in Wirral eight times a day on average, figures reveal.

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs data shows 2,989 fly-tipping incidents were reported to Wirral Borough Council in 2019-20 – 163 fewer than the previous year.

The Local Government Association warned that the offence costs taxpayers almost £50 million a year to clear up.

Dumped waste was found in Wirral's back alleyways 1,167 times accounting for 39% of incidents, 219 discoveries were made on footpaths and bridleways (7%) and 1,029 times on roads and pavements (34%).

Fly-tipped rubbish can include household waste, white goods and construction waste.

Environmental Charity Keep Britain Tidy says the crime is being driven by conmen who offer to remove household rubbish for a fee but do not dispose of it correctly.

Across England, the most common amount of rubbish dumped and reported to councils is equivalent to a small van load.

Rubbish loads of this size accounted for 34% of all 976,000 fly-tipping incidents nationally last year.

Across Wirral, small van loads of waste were dumped illegally on 1,089 occasions – 36% of all reports.

A further 118 incidents saw fly-tippers discard enough rubbish to fill a tipper lorry each, costing the council £36,050 to clear.

There were also 433 incidents which required multiple loads to clear, at a cost of £142,650.

David Renard, environment spokesman for the Local Government Association, said: “Fly-tipping is inexcusable.

"It is not only an eyesore for residents, but a serious public health risk, creating pollution and attracting rats and other vermin.

“We continue to urge the Government to review sentencing guidelines for fly-tipping, so that offenders are given bigger fines for more serious offences to act as a deterrent."

He added that manufacturers should provide more take-back services so customers can hand in old goods when they buy new ones.

Wirral Borough Council took action over 1,304 fly-tipping offences in 2019-20.

The authority undertook 1,298 investigations and wrote four warning letters.

Allison Ogden-Newton OBE, chief executive of Keep Britain Tidy, said: “This environmental crime is being driven by ‘man with a van’ operators who are conning the public with what appears to be a cheap way of getting rid of their rubbish, but one that leads to illegal disposal and environmental devastation.

“Tragically, some businesses that hold a waste carrier licence are breaking the law and fly-tipping the rubbish that households pay them to remove.

“This must stop. We believe the only way to prevent further law-breaking is to fundamentally reform the system.

"We need tests and hurdles to ensure waste carriers are legitimate and accountable.

"Licences should be difficult to get, thoroughly checked and essential to carry out door-to-door waste collection."