Liverpool City Region groups share £165,000 waste reduction fund. Community groups across the Liverpool City Region are to share £165,000 to cut household waste through reuse and recycling projects. The Zero Waste Community Fund 2026/27, run by Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority in partnership with Veolia, has announced support for 15 projects.
Applicants had to address one or more of five priority household waste materials identified by Merseyside Recycling and Waste Authority (MRWA) as offering greater scope for reuse or recycling: food, furniture, electricals, plastics and textiles. Organisations bid for the funding earlier this year.
The funded projects include a travelling textiles education van, cookery classes to cut food waste, furniture upcycling workshops, school assemblies and an electronics repair café. Lesley Worswick, chief executive of MRWA, said the 15 projects 'demonstrate exactly how we can rethink our relationship with waste, transforming it instead into a resource for our communities.'
The UK processed 4.013 million tonnes of waste wood in 2025, 89 per cent of the total generated, according to annual statistics from the Wood Recyclers' Association. The figure is down 7.3 per cent on 2024 after unplanned outages at end-use plants created oversupply and squeezed storage.
recell.store, the Altilium-owned marketplace for used EV batteries, has partnered with testing firm ClearWatt to offer battery health assessments to salvage yards and dismantlers. A pilot will use ClearWatt's EV Flash Test to generate independent health data supporting marketplace transactions.
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