Out of Sight, Out of Mind Using Post-Kerbside Organics Treatment Systems to Engage Australian Communities with Pro-Environmental Household Food Waste Behaviours OACL.pdf (1.15 MB)
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Using Post-Kerbside Organics Treatment Systems to Engage Australian Communities with Pro-Environmental Household Food Waste Behaviours
journal contribution
posted on 2023-07-07, 05:01 authored by Esther LandellsEsther Landells, Anjum NaweedAnjum Naweed, David PearsonDavid Pearson, Vidana Gamage KarunasenaVidana Gamage Karunasena, Samuel OakdenDealing with the wicked problem of global food waste and loss is a complex and challenging area. In Australia, increased political will has landed the diversion of domestic food waste from landfill squarely at the feet of local government (councils), often requiring significant change to kerbside collections systems. This paper discusses how post-kerbside household food waste treatment systems can encourage pro-environmental behaviours. To achieve this, current food waste literature is examined against kerbside domestic waste collection measurable outcomes (diversion rates, system uptake and contamination rates). The hypothesis is that specific interventions can establish, or rebuild, community trust, responsibility and pro-environmental behaviours around food waste avoidance and diversion. Two post-kerbside systems—commercial composting and anaerobic digestion—provided the framework. Two themes emerged from the study: (1) the benefits of connecting the community with the interactions of household food waste inputs with post-treatment outputs (compost, soil conditioners, digestates and biogases); and (2) providing engaged communities with pathways for sustainable, pro-environmental actions whilst normalizing correct kerbside food waste recycling for the less engaged (habitual behaviours, knowledge and cooperation). The paper contributes to understanding how councils can connect their communities with the issues of household food waste.
Funding
Category 4 - CRC Research Income
History
Volume
14Issue
14Start Page
1End Page
17Number of Pages
17eISSN
2071-1050ISSN
2523-8922Publisher
MDPI AGPublisher DOI
Full Text URL
Additional Rights
CC-BYLanguage
enPeer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- Yes
Acceptance Date
2022-07-13External Author Affiliations
Stop Food Waste AustraliaEra Eligible
- Yes