New Trials Will Help WRAP Identify Best Ways To Collect Food Waste
The trials are being phased in over the next few weeks to monitor the environmental and cost benefits of weekly food waste collection schemes, and will involve the collection of all types of food waste from vegetable peelings to meat and dairy produce. Food waste collected during the trials will be taken to in vessel composting sites or anaerobic digesters where it will be transformed into a compost-like product.
Reducing the biodegradable waste which goes to landfill cuts emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, and is an important part of the battle against climate change. Evidence shows that collecting food waste separately and on a weekly basis spurs this aspect of recycling.
A diverse range of local authorities have been chosen for the trials to gauge how food waste collection schemes could work in both urban and rural areas, and among different types of housing and communities.
New collection vehicles will also be tested during the trials and each scheme will involve between 5,000 and 7,000 households within a local authority’s area.
The schemes being trialled range from services to flats in the London Boroughs of Hackney and Kingston upon Thames, to a rural trial in West Devon, where the collection area and distance that needs to be covered is greater.
Each householder will be provided with a modern kitchen caddy and supply of biodegradable liners for use in the home, and residents on a kerbside collection will also receive a kerbside container with a lockable lid.
The trials will continue until next March after which it will be for the participating local authorities to decide whether to expand their food waste collection services.
The trials are being supported financially by WRAP with funding from Defra. WRAP ROTATE (Recycling and Organics Technical Advisory Team) has provided advice on the design and roll out of the trials and on communications materials, including introduction and instruction leaflets, caddy stickers and contamination tags.
WRAP will be supporting the monitoring and evaluation of the trials too. This will include canvassing residents’ views on the services and identifying any barriers to a wider roll-out.
Linda Crichton, of WRAP, said: “Although composting food waste can dramatically reduce the amount of rubbish that goes to landfill, few local authorities offer a separate collection for it at the moment.
“By trialling and analysing different schemes in diverse areas, we can identify good practice and provide information to local authorities to inform their decisions on collecting food waste.”
Editor's notes:
Seventeen local authorities across England have been selected by WRAP (Waste & Resources Action Programme) to trial a weekly food waste collection service. The schemes are based in:
o Mid Bedfordshire o Bradford o Calderdale o Hackney o Newcastle o Preston o South London Waste Partnership including the London Boroughs of Kingston, Sutton, Merton and Croydon o Surrey Waste Partnership including Mole Valley, Elmbridge and Guildford o Waveney o West Devon o Luton o South Shropshire
Photos of the kitchen caddies and kerbside containers being used in the trials are available from WRAP.
About WRAP ROTATE
- ROTATE was launched in June 2004 as an addition to WRAP’s existing programmes for local authorities.
- It is a free advisory service provided to councils in England and Northern Ireland.
- The ROTATE Advisory Team gives out tailored advice and support.
- A local authority can apply for support by emailing rotate@wrap.org.uk.
About WRAP
- WRAP works in partnership to encourage and enable businesses and consumers to be more efficient in their use of materials and recycle more things more often. This helps to minimise landfill, reduce carbon emissions and improve our environment.
- Established as a not-for-profit company in 2000, WRAP is backed by Government funding from Defra and the devolved administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
- Working in seven key areas (Construction, Retail, Manufacturing, Organics, Business Growth, Behavioural Change, and Local Authority Support), WRAP’s work focuses on market development and support to drive forward recycling and materials resource efficiency within these sectors, as well as wider communications and awareness activities including the multi-media national Recycle Now campaign for England.
- More information on all of WRAP’s programmes can be found at www.wrap.org.uk
Gemma Coxedge
3 Monkeys Communications
Tel: 0207 440 2419
gemma@3-monkeys.co.uk
Press Office
Senior Press Officer
WRAP
Tel: 01295 819695
press.office@wrap.org.uk





