A better solution for household food waste

  • Project statusFood waste collection has now begun
  • Last updatedAugust 2022
household-food-waste-project.jpg

Traditionally, our household food waste has gone to landfills, where the Victorian Government charges high fees to accept it. It also produces methane – a harmful greenhouse gas – as it decomposes. We think there's a better way to handle our food waste.

That's why, as of 1 August this year, food waste now goes in your kerbside green-lidded bin with your other green waste. We're collecting this bin every week and taking it to a composting facility, where it will create compost for parks, gardens and farms. We've also modified collection cycles on all our bins to accommodate this change.


What you need to do 

Now that 1 August has arrived, here's what you need to do:

Put food waste in your green-lidded bin

Put all your food waste in your green-lidded bin, not your red-lidded bin. Click here for more information on what can go in your green-lidded Food Organics and Garden Organics (FOGO) bin.

Put your green-lidded bin out every week

Your green-lidded bin is now collected weekly, and your red-lidded and yellow-lidded bins are collected fortnightly.

To check the exact dates for your home when your bins are collected, click here and type in your address.

 


Why compost food waste?

Putting food waste in your kerbside green-lidded bin will help keep waste costs under control
The Victorian Government charges a tax for every tonne of waste taken to landfill. This landfill tax has doubled from 1 July this year, and will continue to increase every year after that. If we don't reduce the amount of rubbish we send to landfill, these costs will skyrocket for Council and for ratepayers.

Traditionally, almost 40% of the waste in our red landfill bins has been food waste. Composting this waste doesn't attract landfill taxes, and will help us avoid some of these cost increases. In fact, we expect composting our food waste to save around $50,000 in landfill taxes from the very first year of composting, and this saving is expected to increase over time.

Putting food waste in your kerbside green-lidded bin will reduce your impact on the environment
In a landfill, food rots without oxygen, which creates a potent greenhouse gas called methane. Composting introduces air into the process, which stops methane being created during decomposition, and reduces the climate impact of food waste.

Compost is also useful – we can use it in parks, gardens or farms, and we're even working with Barwon Water to investigate using it to create renewable energy!


Sorting your waste

Here's how to sort your waste now that food waste collection has begun.

Food and green waste (green lid)

Food and green waste (green lid)


What will change:

  • Put all food waste in this bin
  • This bin will be collected weekly

What you will put in this bin:

  • Food waste, including:
    • fruit and vegetables
    • bread scraps
    • meat and dairy products
  • Certified compostable bags and liners (Look for the label 'AS 4736')
  • Green waste, including:
    • leaves
    • flowers
    • prunings
    • lawn clippings.

Do not put in this bin:

  • Plastic bags (even if the bag is labelled 'biodegradable')
  • Cardboard packaging
  • Plastic packaging on food
  • Tissues
  • Paper towel

Click here for a comprehensive list on how to sort waste into this bin.

Recycling (yellow lid)

Recycling (yellow lid)


What will change:

  • You'll receive a bigger, 240L bin
  • This bin will be collected fortnightly

What you will put in this bin:

  • Clean, rigid plastics, including:
    • milk, juice and detergent bottles
    • yoghurt and ice cream containers
    • other plastics numbered 1, 2 or 5 (Check for a symbol in a triangle)
  • Clean, uncoated paper and cardboard
  • Metal cans and clean aluminium foil
  • Glass bottles and jars

Do not put in this bin:

  • Plastic bags and soft plastics (these can be recycled at RedCycle collection points)
  • Coated paper, including:
    • tetra paks (soy milk or juice boxes)
    • takeaway coffee cups and lids
  • Nappies

Click here for a comprehensive list on how to sort waste into this bin.

Landfill waste (red lid)

Landfill waste (red lid)


What will change:

  • Do not put food waste in this bin
  • This bin will be collected fortnightly

What you will put in this bin:

  • Non-organic waste that cannot be recycled, including:
    • polystyrene and foam
    • broken crockery and ceramics 
    • tetra paks (soy milk or juice boxes)
    • soft plastics (e.g. plastic bags, food packaging) (these can be taken to RedCycle collection points)
    • hard plastic that is not numbered 1, 2 or 5 (Check for a symbol in a triangle)
    • rags and clothing
    • garden hoses

Do not put in this bin:

  • Food waste, including:
    • fruit and vegetables
    • bread scraps
    • meat and bones
    • dairy products
  • Chemicals
  • Batteries (small quantities of household batteries can be disposed at Council offices at 50 Learmonth Street, Queenscliff)
  • Liquids

Click here for a comprehensive list on how to sort waste into this bin.