Food and drink manufacturers prevented over half a
million tonnes of food waste being created in 2006 by sending food
by-products for uses such as animal feed, according to the results of a
survey published by the Food and Drink Federation (FDF) and Defra.
Of the waste that did arise at the sites surveyed, 82% was recycled or
recovered.
The survey found that of the 835,000 tonnes of food and
packaging waste produced at 236 production sites of FDF members in 2006,
686,000 tonnes were recycled or recovered in some way. Overall, only 138,000
tonnes was sent directly to landfill.
The survey results will help inform FDF's work with the
Government's Waste & Resources Action Programme (WRAP) to continue improving
food and packaging waste prevention. The results should also serve as
encouragement to the waste industry to invest in areas of the country where
waste is highest and demand for new anaerobic digesters and composting
capacity is likely to be strongest.
Overall it will help FDF to fulfil its aspiration under
its Five-fold Environmental Ambition published last October to send zero
food and packaging waste to landfill from 2015.
This is contributing to the Government's goals set out in the 2007 Waste
Strategy and the Prime Minister's Strategy Unit's report 'Food Matters:
Towards a Strategy for the 21st Century' published earlier this month.
Phil Woolas MP,
Environment Minister, said:“This is very
useful information from FDF. It will help the waste industry and local
planners to understand where it's worthwhile to provide facilities like
anaerobic digestion, which is the key technology for material such as food
waste. I chaired a meeting only this week with around fifty senior industry
and NGO executives who have pledged to work with Government on ways to
increase the use of anaerobic digestion. Solid facts and figures like these
will be a vital way of taking that aim forward.”
Callton Young, FDF
Director of Sustainability and Competitiveness, said:"The
results of this survey demonstrate the level of ongoing commitment by FDF
members to making a significant contribution to improving the environment,
by targeting areas where they can make the biggest difference. Our members'
initiatives are preventing significant amounts of waste at their sites and
it is fantastic that the vast majority of waste that does arise is already
treated in an environmentally friendly way. We hope that the survey results
will send a message to the waste industry to invest more in anaerobic
digestion and composting capacity in line with FDF's ambition to send zero
food and packaging waste to landfill from 2015."
Richard Swannell,
Director of Retail and Organics Programmes, WRAP, said:"WRAP
welcomes FDF establishing a base line on food waste for its members. The
industry is already taking steps to recycle and recover waste. This work
also shows the potential for further treatment of food waste using
technology such as anaerobic digestion. WRAP will continue to work with FDF
members on further waste minimisation activities and on expanding the food
waste processing infrastructure through its capital grants scheme."