For those of us who’ve worked in or with the waste industry for a while, it certainly feels like times are changing. A public obsession with single use plastics, rallying cries for better food waste segregation and management, and the emergence of the new agenda in town: the circular economy.
So what does this mean for the oft maligned waste management contractor? How does its role need to adapt and evolve to respond to the progressively more outspoken ethical consumers?
At Ditto Sustainability, we work with commercial and industrial waste producers across the public and private sector, as well as waste contractors and consultants. For the waste industry to be successful, it must evolve with the times and respond to the drivers the waste producers are prioritising.
Thanks to the emergence of the circular economy agenda and the rise of ethical consumerism, today businesses and individuals are asking more questions and realising that if waste can be prevented, that is much better from a sustainability perspective.
So, how can waste contractors align with these changing dynamics? I think it comes down to three core things:
Waste management is a technical discipline. Doing it effectively requires detailed technical, operational and regulatory skills. The challenge for these organisations in educating their people is often logistical, covering a variety of business functions, and with staff on the road spread over large geographical areas.
We worked closely with their Recycling Division, providing a uniquely developed and comprehensive learning platform which helps employees understand why zero waste, the waste hierarchy and the circular economy are important to the company and its clients. This resulted in a much more time efficient, cost-effective and sustainable way to train staff, and resulted in a 30% increase in knowledge and understanding.
Compliance, transparency and accountability.
Effective waste management and resource efficiency are staples of a progressive circular economy strategy. However, it can be very challenging for organisations that use multiple contractors, as the range of activities undertaken can be highly diverse. This leads to complex procurement processes and multiple waste streams, creating challenges for both data management and compliance.
Using Ditto Sustainability‘s software, NHS Scotland now has the ability to monitor and manage their waste and resource data across all 14 NHS Boards. Each Board has access to their own data whilst Health Facilities Scotland has a holistic view of all the national data. The software allows waste contractors to fulfil their requirements (as specified in the National Non-Healthcare Waste Contract) to upload consistent data per collection point in a timely fashion.
A key feature that NHS Scotland requested was allowing NHS staff to input, update and amend waste data. The dashboards, which monitor historic and current performance at a site and NHS Board level against national targets, finally give NHS Scotland a real-time view with up-to-date information against their Waste Management Action Plan.
The procurement agenda is moving on and to be a winning bid, the contractor must demonstrate it can work with the organisation to meet its strategy and targets, rather than push its own agenda.
Some of the simpler things like effective, high-quality account management and customer success are simple concepts, but are too often rare to evidence. The customer wants to see proactivity, not reactivity.
Demonstrating value links into all the items discussed in this piece, from enabling a knowledgeable and engaged workforce, through to being transparent and accountable. And this is only going to get more intense, especially as we see the rise of AI (artificial intelligence) to measure and monitor performance.