Councils are stepping up initiatives to break their dependency on fossil fuels. East Devon DC has launched a recycling scheme which will convert around one million kilos of food waste into electricity for 12,000 homes. The waste will go to a biogas plant, which will supply electricity for the National Grid. Wrexham CBC has changed its bin rounds to save 2,000 miles a month in fuel costs for its refuse lorries and reduce its carbon footprint. Camden LBC revealed it was trialling a street-cleaning vehicle converted to run on compressed bio-methane, in partnership with supplier Gasrec, Veolia Environmental Services and van manufacturer, Iveco. Compressed bio-methane is extracted from a landfill site. Cllr Alexis Rowell, Camden's eco champion, said: 'The average household bin is one-third food waste. Rather than send it to landfill or an incinerator, we can turn it into a gas and run our municipal vehicle fleet on it' And the Combined Heat and Power Association's announced a national conference on 19 November to tackle energy costs.
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