Westminster is buzzing, but not about the usual backbiting. A new report from the Policy Exchange think tank has landed like a grenade. It says a simple, ancient technique could transform food waste into gold. And British firms are already ahead.
The trick? Fermentation. Not the hipster kind. The industrial kind. Think vats of microbes eating your leftover chips and turning them into chemicals. Instead of rotting in landfill, that waste becomes bio-plastics, animal feed, even fuel.
Sources close to DEFRA tell me the department is watching closely. Minister Mark Spencer has been briefed. The numbers are staggering. UK households throw away 6.6 million tonnes of food annually. That's £250 a year per family. Globally, it's a $1 trillion problem.
Here's the thing. The technology works. Firms like London-based Bio-Bean are already recycling coffee grounds into biomass pellets. In Cambridge, a start-up called Lixea is turning wood waste into chemicals. They are small. But the potential is huge.
The report argues for a simple policy change. Tax incentives for businesses that use recycled food waste. A carbon price on landfill. The Treasury knows it. Officials I speak to say it's about the money, not the planet. Save money, save emissions.
The race is global. South Korea already recycles 95% of its food waste. But they use expensive machines. The British approach is low-tech, high-yield. It's a classic UK innovation. We invent it, others commercialise it. This time, we might keep the profit.
Why now? The supply chain crisis. Food prices rising. Every gram of waste is a gram of lost profit. Big supermarkets are listening. Tesco has pledged to halve waste by 2030. This method could get them there faster.
Political implications? A wedge issue for Labour. Starmer's team is eyeing a 'circular economy' pitch. But the Tories don't want to be outflanked on green growth. Expect a policy announcement before the summer recess.
The key players: Lord Deben, chairman of the Climate Change Committee, has been whispering in ears. Also, the NFU wants to see farm waste turned into fertiliser. The green lobby is wary of 'greenwash'. But the numbers don't lie.
A Downing Street source told me: 'We are looking at this very seriously. It's about getting the regulation right. Not too heavy, not too light.'
The challenge remains collection. Separating food waste is a hassle. But trials in Leeds and Bristol show it can work. The infrastructure is there. We just need the will.
This is not a silver bullet. But it is a sharp arrow. And it points to profit. Watch this space. The game is shifting.









