Council to Launch FOGO Trial

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Wollongong City Council will launch a Food Organics Garden Organics or FOGO trial in three suburbs across the City this September.

Selected households in Austinmer, Cordeaux Heights and Warrawong will be invited to participate in the three month trial. During the September 2019 trial residents will be asked to put their household organics such as raw and cooked meat, fruit and vegetable scraps and bread into their green-lidded bin along with their normal garden waste.

The organics bins will be collected fortnightly, as normal, but the contents will be taken to a Council contractor’s site at Kembla Grange for controlled composting.

“We know our community is keen to see Wollongong embrace FOGO as a way to reduce our environmental impact and keep organics from landfill,” Wollongong Lord Mayor Councillor Gordon Bradbery AM said.

“We’ve more than 216,000 people who call this area home and together we generate a significant amount of waste. By running this trial, we’ll able to assess FOGO as an option for our city and to identify ways we can reduce the volume of landfill and our greenhouse gas emissions.”

Wollongong City Council Director Infrastructure and Works Andrew Carfield said waste management was a significant challenge for the city with our landfill site at Whyte’s Gully contributing 86 per cent of Council’s greenhouse gas emissions.

“Our residents put close to 40,000 tonnes of residential waste into the landfill site at Whyte’s Gully each year,” he said.

“Food and organic materials that go into this site create greenhouse gases as they decompose, and these are environmentally harmful.

“We already offer and support a range of ways people can recycle items and dispose of environmentally harmful items, such as car batteries and paint, to keep them out of landfill. This is the next step to explore a way to keep organic matter out of our landfill.

“It is important we get it right and that’s why we’re carrying out this trial in three suburbs. It will give us the chance to explore FOGO in a practical way.”

The trial will start in September and target selected streets in Austinmer, Cordeaux Heights and Warrawong. The streets have been chosen according to waste collection routes and the trials do not cover entire suburbs.

About 1600 households will be included in the trial and those who fall within the zone will be notified by letter in July. A comprehensive information kit, a kitchen caddy and caddy liners will be delivered to residents in August ahead of the September start.

“I know a lot of people will be very excited by this step and I encourage those who are notified in July to embrace this trial,” Cr Bradbery said.

“I’d also like to assure them that they won’t be going into this alone. We’ve been working closely with Remondis to ensure there is information and support available to ensure they have everything they need to get behind the trial.”

For residents outside the trial zones, Cr Bradbery asked them to continue to process their waste as normal.

“FOGO collections undergo a different treatment process to general organic garden waste collections,” Cr Bradbery said.

“This is why we need residents who are outside the FOGO trial to continue to use their green -lidded bins in the same way they always have – for garden waste only.

“It’s also important – and I need to emphasise – that for residents it’s business as usual in terms of bin pick up days. There are no changes to the days or frequency of bin collections. This is just an additional aspect to our waste management.”

/Public Release. View in full here.