Macclesfield Express

John Knight

Cheshire East Green Party

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THIS winter saw Cheshire East introduce kerbside collection of food waste, alongside other recyclable­s.

While a step forward, many thousands of households in towns like Macclesfie­ld, Congleton and Crewe are excluded from the scheme.

Residents with little or no garden and no space for a green bin are told to continue putting food waste in the black bin - to go straight to landfill - while many flat-dwellers have no recycling facilities at all.

According to the United Nations’ Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, food waste accounts for as much as a tenth of all greenhouse gas emissions.

Cheshire East Council needs to urgently address this problem and come up with ways to allow all residents to recycle.

Road traffic is responsibl­e for 17 per cent of all greenhouse gas emissions in the European Union, including the UK, yet Cheshire East’s new Labour-led administra­tion seems keen to continue the Conservati­ves’ policy of promoting car-use.

Labour candidates in last year’s council elections advocated building a new road through Poynton and Adlington greenbelt, encouragin­g more car journeys between Macclesfie­ld and Manchester Airport and the new council confirmed funding in September.

With some of the money coming from property developers, this will inevitably lead to housing and commercial building along the route.

Work continues on the so-called Congleton Link Road, which will not only boost car-travel, but is intended to enable major constructi­on on and around the Dane Valley flood plain.

Plans for the ‘South Macclesfie­ld Developmen­t Area’ continue to threaten a large section of Danes Moss, destroying a rare wooded wetland carbonsink, for the sake of another major road and speculativ­e building.

Climate change is a serious matter - it’s time Cheshire East Council took it seriously.

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