European and UK legislation has led local authorities to implement waste prevention programmes and assess the options available for diverting waste from final disposal to landfill. Food waste is part of the waste stream where significant diversions can be made, with an estimated 6·7 Mt of such waste thrown out by UK households each year. One option available for managing food waste is the green cone (GC) food waste digester. The unit is installed at household level and is designed to accept all food waste including meat, fish and processed food. The unit heats up through solar gain and the waste in the GC is converted into water, carbon dioxide and a small amount of residue. This paper describes a project that directly investigated changes in waste by householders after they started using a GC food digester. A statistically significant reduction in waste was found, at a 99% confidence level, in households using a GC food digester. An average reduction of 2·1 kg of waste per household per week (from 11·2 to 9·1 kg) was seen in a sample of 68 new GC users compared with a sample of 1446 control, non-users.
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May 2009
Research Article|
May 01 2009
Use of home food digesters to reduce household waste Available to Purchase
M. K. Harder;
M. K. Harder
Waste & Energy Research Group (WERG), University of Brighton
UK
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R. Woodard
R. Woodard
Waste & Energy Research Group (WERG), University of Brighton
UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
April 18 2008
Accepted:
July 04 2008
Online ISSN: 1747-6534
Print ISSN: 1747-6526
© 2009 Thomas Telford Ltd
2009
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Waste and Resource Management (2009) 162 (2): 69–73.
Article history
Received:
April 18 2008
Accepted:
July 04 2008
Citation
Harder MK, Woodard R (2009), "Use of home food digesters to reduce household waste". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Waste and Resource Management, Vol. 162 No. 2 pp. 69–73, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/warm.2009.162.2.69
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