logo
Liverpool: Vegetable oil-powered trucks to collect food waste

Liverpool: Vegetable oil-powered trucks to collect food waste

BBC News28-05-2025

Dozens of lorries powered by vegetable oil are to be rolled out to help collect Liverpool's new food-waste bins from next spring.In order to comply with legislation introduced four years ago, Liverpool City Council will have to provide weekly food-waste collections to every home under its jurisdiction from April 2026.The local authority in Liverpool, which is regarded as having the second-worst recycling rate in the UK, is to sign off on plans to acquire thousands of new bins and specially-powered vehicles, to ensure they meet next spring's law change.Plans are also being considered to develop an 80,000-tonne food-waste processing plant within the wider metropolitan region.
Last year, it was revealed that food waste makes up approximately a third of domestic waste-bin contents.Local authority officials believe there are better ways to process food waste, and want to make it easier for people to use council recycling containers more effectively.Ahead of the looming April 2026 deadline, the initial fleet of waste-collection vehicles will be diesel-based, according to a report due before Liverpool Council's cabinet next week, as detailed by the Local Democracy Reporting Service.However, to minimise the carbon emissions associated with diesel vehicles, the council is proposing using hydrogenated vegetable oil (HVO) - a renewable fuel made up of vegetable oil, animal fats and other liquid food-waste material.HVO produces 98% less CO2 than diesel and is commonly used in the haulage industry. It has already been been adopted by some refuse-collection vehicles used by Biffa Waste Management when fulfilling their Wirral Council contract.The vehicles are understood to have an operational life of seven years, and the intention would be to move on to biogas thereafter.
Food caddies
Liverpool Council will initially order 20 vehicles, but this may increase to 36 trucks - at a cost of more than £3.3 - depending on how many households participate in the programme. The council will spend a further £1.1m on the food-waste caddies. Meanwhile, a cabinet report set out how the construction of a food-waste processing plant near, or close to, Merseyside could reduce council costs and create jobs.Investigations have also been carried out to look at the potential for building and operating an 80,000-tonne (78,000-tons) food waste processing plant in the Liverpool City Region.Consultants have recommended further work to develop a high-level business case for local treatment facilities that generate biogas and support the future transition to gas-powered collection vehicles, once the infrastructure and fuel supplies are in place. Liverpool Council currently sends 130,000 tonnes of general waste by train to Redcar, Cleveland, where it is incinerated to generate electricity.
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ex-hospital consultant bailed by court on indecent images and voyeurism charges
Ex-hospital consultant bailed by court on indecent images and voyeurism charges

The Independent

time18 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Ex-hospital consultant bailed by court on indecent images and voyeurism charges

A former hospital consultant has appeared in court charged with voyeurism, attempting to incite a teenage girl to engage in sexual activity, and making indecent images of children. Dr Matthew Isles, who worked as an ear, nose and throat specialist prior to his arrest in February this year, spoke only to confirm his personal details during a brief hearing at North Staffordshire Justice Centre on Wednesday. The 53-year-old, of Whiston, near Cheadle, Staffordshire, was not asked to enter any pleas at the request of his lawyer and was granted conditional bail to appear at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court on June 16. The hearing was told that 13 new charges faced by Isles, who worked at the Royal Stoke University Hospital and County Hospital, Stafford, would be joined with similar allegations already being dealt with at the Crown Court. The latest charges, read into the court record by the magistrates' clerk, include one of attempting to incite a 15-year-old girl to engage in sexual activity. Wearing a dark suit and a blue striped tie, Isles appeared before three magistrates further charged with possessing extreme pornographic images portraying sex acts involving a person and live animals, three counts of distributing indecent images of children via messaging apps and one of attempting to engage in sexual communication with a child. Magistrates were told the former medic is also charged with observing a person doing a private act in 2023 for sexual gratification by recording them without consent, three counts of making indecent images of a child, one of possessing prohibited images of a child, and one of possessing extreme pornographic images 'portraying an act likely to result in serious injury to person's private parts'. The remaining new charge faced by Isles alleges that he was in possession of a 'paedophile manual movie' in February this year at Whiston 'which contained advice or guidance' about sexual abuse. The University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust (UHNM) said in February that it was fully co-operating with the police in their investigation but it could not comment on an active criminal case. The Trust has since confirmed that Isles is no longer one of its employees.

Manchester City 'poach key Arne Slot ally from Liverpool's backroom team' having already lured Jurgen Klopp's former No 2 Pep Lijnders to Etihad
Manchester City 'poach key Arne Slot ally from Liverpool's backroom team' having already lured Jurgen Klopp's former No 2 Pep Lijnders to Etihad

Daily Mail​

time19 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Manchester City 'poach key Arne Slot ally from Liverpool's backroom team' having already lured Jurgen Klopp's former No 2 Pep Lijnders to Etihad

Manchester City are 'poaching a key member of Arne Slot 's Liverpool backroom staff', having already agreed a deal with Jurgen Klopp 's ex-assistant Pep Lijnders. Head of opposition analysis, James French, who has worked at Anfield for 13 years, is now set to depart and join Liverpool's Premier League rivals to work closely with Pep Guardiola, according to the Athletic. In a blow to the English champions, the Portuguese born member of the backroom team will work on set-piece coaching in addition to analysis at the Etihad. French will be reunited with Lijnders, who he worked closely with on Merseyside during Klopp's tenure. Liverpool now face the task of reshuffling their backroom staff, having already lost Slot's assistant John Heitinga to Ajax in the last week. It is fascinating to see Guardiola target the staff of his former rival in Klopp as he aims to pick their brains for new tactical innovation and ideas. After a disappointing season, one in which City failed to bring home any silverware, the Spaniard is making sweeping changes behind the scenes. Juanma Lillo, Carlos Vicens, and Inigo Dominguez are all leaving and Guardiola is seeking fresh faces to challenge and inspire him. Lijinders in particular could be regarded as a coup, given his loyalty to Klopp and previous admission that he would only leave Liverpool when his great friend and mentor did, to take a head coaching role. He did just that with the top job at RB Salzburg but was sacked after just seven months at the helm. Norwich City interviewed the 42-year-old Dutchman but ultimately the temptation to work with Guardiola appears to have superseded any loyalty to Liverpool or ambitions to hold another head coaching role. He will be in place at City before their first game of the Club World Cup on June 18. It is a summer of great change for Guardiola, who already splashed out on players in January and is continuing to bolster the squad with Tijjani Reijnders and Rayan Cherki set to join ahead of next season.

Suffolk man calls for paid student nursing placements
Suffolk man calls for paid student nursing placements

BBC News

time21 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Suffolk man calls for paid student nursing placements

The father of a student nurse said he was "blissfully ignorant" trainees were not paid for their NHS placements and has launched a petition. Alex Lawrence, from Eye, Suffolk, has called for the abolishment of student nursing university fees and unpaid placements after his daughter, Tabatha, started her Prinsley, the Labour MP for Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket, previously worked in the NHS for 30 years and said he agreed with the petition.A government spokesperson said nurses played a "critical role" and there was a non-repayable grant of at least £5,000 available to help with their student placements. As part of nursing degrees, students have to complete 2,300 hours of clinical placements that are unpaid while also paying for their tuition fees."If you've got the support of a family that don't charge you keep, you don't have to pay rent, maybe [who] make sure you get there every day, that's absolutely lovely," Mr Lawrence, whose petition has more than 6,200 signatures, said."But I do worry dearly about all the people out there that aren't quite as lucky, that might be fantastic nurses, doctors and dentists, but because of the financial implications will never get the chance," he added. Mr Lawrence added he felt the non-repayable grant available to student nurses "barely" helped. Prinsley said he agreed with Mr Lawrence that nurses were "essential" and he would sign the petition. "If somebody asks me, 'Who looks after the patients?', I always say it is the nurses," he said."I agree with them that they certainly shouldn't be doing this for nothing."I think the whole thing really merits review." Melanie McAteer, Suffolk's senior officer for Royal College of Nursing, said there had been a 35% drop in students applying for nursing degrees since 2021, and 21% of students drop out of the course each year."We know that nursing students have shocking experiences of being unable to afford food, being homeless and facing uncertain employment after qualifying," she added.A spokesperson for the University of Suffolk said its applications for 2025 entry to undergraduate adult nursing were 3% lower compared with the same point last spokesperson added applications for children's nursing were higher and it had seen an uptake in nursing apprenticeships."Nurses play a critical role in providing high-quality, compassionate and safe care, as well as helping to restore our world-class NHS system, as part of our Plan for Change," a government spokesperson said."Eligible nurses receive a non-repayable grant of at least £5,000 per academic year from the NHS through the Learning Support Fund, in addition to maintenance and tuition fee loans provided by the Student Loans Company." Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store