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waste, bioeconomy, science and technology, house of lords, parliament

Lords start investigation into potential economic benefits of waste

12 November 2013

Image of UK Parliament portcullis

The House of Lords Science and Technology Committee will hear from the first witnesses to give evidence to its new inquiry into waste and the bioeconomy on Tuesday 12 November.

The committee is exploring the potential to create a multi-million pound economy from waste, using by-products from agriculture, industry and households.

Experts in waste and the bioeconomy will be asked about the different kinds of waste being used as raw materials (feedstocks), what the environmental impact of this might be, and how the feedstocks can be transformed into something of value.

Witnesses

Tuesday 12 November, Committee Room 4

At 10.40am:

  • Dr Jeremy Tomkinson, CEO, National Non-Food Crops Centre; and
  • Dr Ben Allen and Dr Bettina Kretschmer, Senior Policy Analysts, Institute for European Environmental Policy.

They will be asked about areas such as the different types of wastes which are available; whether they can be easily used as a feedstock; what the potential impact is of using waste as a feedstock in a bioeconomy; how well positioned the UK is to exploit this particular use of waste; and what the economic and environmental costs are of disposing of waste.

At 11.40am:

  • Professor Greg Tucker, Professor of Plant Biochemistry, University of Nottingham;
  • Dr Graham Hillier, Director of Strategy and Futures, Centre for Process Innovation; and
  • Dr Will Barton, Head of Manufacturing, Technology Strategy Board (TSB).

They will be asked about areas such as whether there is research underway to enable a wider range of feedstocks to be used; what a major breakthrough might represent; how strong the UK research base is in this area; whether it is possible to quantify the economic and environmental impacts of using waste as a feedstock; and how close to commercialisation this technology is.

Further information