London - New research from Defra shows that 78 percent of people support having a separate food waste collection to enable recycling of food, and two thirds of households said they used their separate food waste collection. The research, which surveyed over 4,000 households around the country, also shows that 92 per cent of people who frequently use their council’s food collection find it easy to use.
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| Foto: Pixelio / Michael Krause |
Earlier in 2009, Environment Secretary Hilary Benn had announced that Defra was exploring potentially banning some materials such as food from landfill entirely. Options will be published in 2010. Commenting on the research Mr Benn said: “How can it make sense to feed our landfill sites with our Christmas leftovers every year when we could be recycling them and turning them into something useful? Our latest research is very encouraging as it shows that separate food waste collections are definitely working in the areas that are using them, and - more importantly - people are happy with them. We would like to see all local authorities collecting food waste as soon as possible and by 2020 at the latest.”
137 local authorities in the UK now provide food waste collections for their residents, around a third of all the local authorities who collect waste, and through WRAP (Waste & Resources Action Programme) the Government has also announced today how £1.3 million will be split between eight local authorities for separate food waste collection. Seven local authorities and one waste partnership are to each receive this share of a £1.3million to introduce new separate collections of food waste from households.
Mr Benn added: “It’s not about making it more difficult for everyone to sort out their rubbish, and we’ll be using the evidence from this research plus the experience of the areas introducing or extending food waste collections under the funding announced today by WRAP, to help us make decisions on the next steps.”
The research can be found at defra.gov.uk. Quelle: UK Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
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Artikel vom: 18.01.2010 14:50
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