Abstract

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to present results from the action research project, where sustainability professionals, local businesses and academic researchers collaborated on exploring barriers for food waste recycling in SMEs food outlets in order to inform local policy and business practices in Bristol, UK. Design/methodology/approach The researchers conducted face-to-face, qualitative surveys of 79 catering businesses in three diverse areas of the city. The action research methodology was applied, where a range of co-researchers contributed towards study design and review. Findings The research reveals the main barriers to recycling and how such perceptions differ depending on whether the respondents do or do not recycle, with “convenience” and “cost” being the main issue according to the already recycling participants. On the other hand, participants who do not recycle state that their main reason is “not enough waste” and “lack of space”. Practical implications Participants recommended a range of measures, which could improve the current food waste services in Bristol. For example, they suggest that business engagement should address the barriers voiced by the participants applying the framings used by them, rather than assuming restaurants and cafes are not aware of the issue. By inviting a variety of non-academic stakeholders into the process of research design and analysis, the project addressed the imbalances in knowledge production and policy design. Originality/value Despite the local and qualitative focus of this paper, the results and research methodology could act as a useful guide for conducting food waste action research in the policy context.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe landscape of food waste in the UK

  • The findings reported in this paper contribute to co-designing policy and organisational recommendations related to food waste recycling in Bristol, UK

  • This paper presented results of the exploratory action research project investigating commercial food waste collection services in Bristol

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Summary

Introduction

The landscape of food waste in the UK. It arises from each stage of food handling; from growing, processing, preparation, retail to consumption. There are no empirical national-scale calculations of food waste alone, but it is estimated that the annual food waste in the UK totals around 10 million tonnes (Mt). This quantity is associated with estimated emissions of 20 Mt greenhouse gases (mostly through landfills releasing methane) and an economic cost £17 bn (WRAP, 2017). Tackling food waste presents a significant policy opportunity to tackle climate change, hunger and save money

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