Organic Waste

Revision as of 11:27, 5 December 2019 by Bin52 (talk | contribs) (expanded text)

Overview

Organic waste is waste that is biodegradable, including Garden Waste and Food Waste[1] ‌.

Anaerobic Digestion and Composting are the best methods for dealing with organic waste, and is essential to diverting waste from landfill and producing renewable energy and sustainable fertilisers[1].

Macro Tonnage

The most recent information published by DEFRA [2] [3]identifies three categories of wastes that are generally considered to be organic and is part of the broader tonnage reported as UK Waste Tonnage:

Reported by DEFRA as Generated in 2016 Tonnes
Animal & Mixed Food Waste 3,056,065
Vegetable Wastes 6,019,100
Animal Faeces, Urine & Manure 114,422

The final category is not relevant to household waste and local authority waste generally, but the other two categories have more significant tonnage that is split across primarily household, commercial and industrial tonnages as shown the in pie charts below:

File:Organics Pie Chart.png
Organic Waste - Tonnage Reported by DEFRA as arising in 2016 (from two specific groups)

Green garden Waste Only

Below is a list of local authorities that sends more than 2000 tonnes of this material to a single waste operator.

Mixed garden and Food Waste

Below is a list of local authorities that sends more than 2000 tonnes of this material to a single waste operator.

Other Compostable Waste

Below is a list of local authorities that sends more than 2000 tonnes of this material to a single waste operator.

Waste food Only

Below is a list of local authorities that sends more than 2000 tonnes of this material to a single waste operator.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 WRAP, 2017. Organics | WRAP UK. Wrap.org.uk. [online] [Accessed 5 Dec. 2019].
  2. Digest of Waste Resources 2018 reporting data from 2016
  3. UK Statistics on Waste 2019 updating some of the 2018 Digest with 2017 data