City moves to process food waste locally

Geelong is set to process more food waste locally after the addition of two in-vessel HotRot composting units at the City of Greater Geelong's Anakie Organics Processing Facility.

The two units will help divert up to 1,200 tonnes of food waste from landfill each year and are an important step towards a food waste solution for the whole Geelong region.

The units have begun processing material from the Lara Food Waste Collection Trial, the new Wurriki Nyal offices and other City-managed facilities.

The HotRots convert food waste into high-quality compost for use in the City's parks including the Botanic Gardens sporting grounds and local farms.

The installation of the second unit was supported by a $250,000 grant from Sustainability Victoria on behalf of the Victorian Government.

Deputy Mayor Anthony Aitken

We're very proud of the clever and creative composting facility we've created at Anakie.

The expansion of this facility to involve food waste builds on Council's commitment to the circular economy and our food waste trial in Lara.

Not only are we converting waste into high-grade compost for our community, keeping the process local means we're also cutting down the emissions from transporting it outside the region.

Residents can purchase compost produced from the region's food and garden waste from local garden supply stores by asking for "Better for Geelong" compost.

View the list of suppliers of Geelong-made compost.

Food waste makes up a third of the average household landfill bin, with a food waste service for all Greater Geelong households a key goal of the City's Waste and Resource Recovery Strategy.

The Lara Food Waste Collection Trial has collected approximately 200 tonnes of food waste to date – equivalent to 20 full waste collection trucks – material that would have otherwise gone to landfill.

Findings from the trial will help inform a gradual rollout of a food waste collection service across Geelong in 2025-26, when the City will have more food waste processing capacity in place.

The City has also signed on to use the Barwon Water's new Regional Renewable Organics Network facility at Black Rock Water Reclamation Plant in Connewarre, which aims to convert 40,000 tonnes of organic waste to renewable energy and nutrient-rich products for agriculture from mid-2025.

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