Reading residents are being offered advice to help them create less food waste and dispose of it properly as part of Food Waste Action Week (March 6 – 12).
Reading Borough Council is supporting the event, held by WRAP (Waste and Resources Action Programme), a charity who claim that 4.5 million tonnes of edible food is thrown away each year by UK households.
The Council introduced food waste recycling in early 2020, a change which has seen recycling rates rise from 34% to 50%.
How can you help?
- Planning your meals and writing a shopping list can help you only buy what you need and what you will use. 25% of food wasted in households is due to cooking, preparing or serving too much. This costs UK households £3.5billion each year.
- You can donate any unwanted, unopened food items to food banks such as Readifood. Alternatively, you can donate them on food swapping apps or websites.
- Use a slow cooker which is energy efficient and good for batch cooking which means you’ll waste less and have future meals prepped for you.
- Storing your food in the right place will help it to stay fresher for longer. Make sure to freeze any food that you won’t need until later in the week and keep your fruit and veg in the fridge
- Try the SuperCook website to use what you’ve got left. Enter your leftover food items on the website and instantly receive a meal suggestion and recipe for what you can make with your excess food items. Big Oven also has lots of recipe ideas to use up your leftovers.
- Make sure to put your rubbish in the correct bin. By recycling food waste you can help stop it going to landfill. Recycled food waste can then be turned into fertiliser for farming, and electricity to power homes.
Residents can put all forms of cooked and uncooked food in their food waste bin including fruit and veg, meat and fish, rice, pasta, bread, dairy, egg shells, tea bags and coffee grounds. Used cooking oil - in a sealed plastic bottle - can also be placed inside food waste bins for recycling.
The second phase of Reading’s food waste recycling scheme rollout started in the summer and has brought the service to more than 950 flats. This work is continuing through 2023 and will eventually see 14,500 high and low rise flats participating.
READ AFTER - Princess of Wales to Kate Winslet: Inspiring women from Berkshire
Lead Member for Environmental Services & Community Safety, Cllr Karen Rowland, said: “Joining in with food waste recycling is a great way to do your bit for the environment, and Reading residents are really excited about participating.
“We want to reach out to those of you, however, who have fallen off the recycling habit, or are having issues, to join back in the recycling routine with your neighbours! If this is you, please contact the Council on 01189 373787 or via the website to make arrangements to get back in the groove on food recycling!
“For those of you well into recycling, take advantage of our tips to improve your own food recycling, save yourself money and be smarter about what you buy and find ways to make your food last longer”.
Anyone in need of a new food waste kitchen caddy or outdoor food waste bin can contact the Council to receive replacements for free.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here