A Kent recycling company introduces a scheme to repurpose used coffee.
Finn Macdiarmid reports.
Finn Macdiarmid reports.
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00:00The UK uses a lot of coffee, and Canterbury is no exception. With a dense population and
00:06plenty of cafes, hotels and restaurants, the city is the testing ground for a new coffee
00:11recycling scheme.
00:13Unlike driving your car, littering or using up electricity, drinking coffee might have
00:18a bigger environmental impact than you might think.
00:21The UK actually generates 250,000 tonnes of coffee grounds a year, and one Kent recycling
00:28company is trying to tell people this is a bigger issue than they think.
00:32Country Style, a waste management company, have launched a weekly collection for coffee
00:37grounds at Cafe 35 in Canterbury, with hopes of expanding across Kent.
00:41We're already collecting across every which area of Kent, so it wouldn't be too difficult
00:48for us, but we wanted to focus on Canterbury. It's got a hugely dense population of cafes,
00:55hotels, there's a lot of coffee grounds, waste produced here. So here, folks, in places
01:02like that, we want to get the density, so start here and we'll definitely push out
01:06as long as we can get the customers to get behind us and to try and recycle more of the
01:12coffee.
01:13The scheme sees the grounds emptied into a 40 litre caddy, where the waste is taken to
01:17a site in Cambridgeshire.
01:20At the end of the recycling process, the grounds become an organic pellet that Country
01:25Style hope to sell next year to gardeners and horticulturalists as a fertiliser.
01:30The businesses themselves, however, are the ones who have to pay for it, so I asked the
01:35owner of Cafe 35 if this might have a financial impact.
01:39I think you need to weigh it out because obviously the businesses that are putting the coffee
01:43grounds into their general waste, there is a cost against the waste, so by not putting
01:50it into the general waste any more, that's actually going to reduce those costs. So if
01:53anything, it may be no more expensive to do, it may actually be even cheaper.
01:58Country Style say they wanted to make the service cheap so that it would be easier for
02:02businesses like Cafe 35 to adopt it, but did say that some businesses could pay more for
02:08that sustainability.
02:09Well, with summer ending, we could see more and more people visiting their local cafes
02:13for a coffee.
02:15Finn McDermid for KMTV in Canterbury.