Wokingham Today

Food waste collection­s to start in April

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amounts to more than 10,000 tonnes annually.

When sent to landfill and left to decompose, food waste produces methane, a potent greenhouse gas.

By introducin­g collection­s, Wokingham Borough Council claims it can reduce the amount of methane released into the atmosphere and save up to £100 per tonne by diverting waste from landfill.

The food waste will be sent to an anaerobic digestion plant, which captures the methane created by the waste to produce energy and fertiliser.

Cllr Norman Jorgensen, executive member for environmen­t, sports, environmen­tal health, leisure and libraries, said: “We’re all becoming aware of the impact we are having on the environmen­t and so it’s important we do our bit. When food waste is sent to landfill, it produces methane – a greenhouse gas 20 times more harmful than carbon dioxide.

Introducin­g food waste collection­s will allow us to reduce the amount of methane in the atmosphere, and reduce how much waste we send to landfill.”

Each household will received a lockable 23-litre kerbside food waste container to prevent animals getting to the waste, along with a smaller kitchen caddy and a roll of caddy liners. Food waste will be collected on a weekly basis at the same time as existing blue bag and black box collection­s, which will not change. Households will continue to receive an allocation of 80 blue bags, or more for larger families, on an annual basis and weekly collection­s will remain the same.

The annual delivery of blue bags will be slightly earlier next year to allow for the introducti­on of food waste collection­s.

The new service will be provided by current waste collection providers, Veolia, who will be providing a new fleet to support the service.

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