Biffa
Biffa Limited is a United Kingdom-based waste management company headquartered in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, that provides nationwide services for the collection, treatment, recycling, and disposal of both hazardous and non-hazardous waste.[1][2] Established in 1912, it operates as an integrated provider focused on transforming waste into resources through redistribution, reuse, and recovery processes, serving businesses and organizations to minimize environmental impact and costs.[3][2] With approximately 11,000 employees across more than 200 sites, Biffa has evolved from basic waste removal in its early years to a leader in technologically advanced recovery solutions, including specialized operations like food-grade plastic recycling via its Biffa Polymers division.[4] Acquired by Energy Capital Partners in 2023, the company maintains a strong emphasis on operational efficiency and regulatory compliance in its core activities of waste transfer, landfill management, and hazardous materials handling.[2] Biffa has pursued sustainability goals, including a 70% reduction in Scope 1 and 2 carbon emissions since 2002 and a commitment to net zero by 2050, earning accolades such as Recycler of the Year at the 2025 Environmental Packaging Awards and wins at the 2024 National Recycling Awards for innovation in recycling.[2][5][6] However, it has faced legal challenges, including a £1.5 million fine in 2021 for recklessly exporting poorly sorted household waste in violation of regulations, and lawsuits from victims alleging modern slavery involvement through subcontractors at its facilities.[7][8] These incidents highlight ongoing tensions between industry growth and strict environmental and labor standards enforcement.[7]History
Founding and Early Development
Biffa was founded in 1912 by Richard Henry Biffa in Wembley, London, operating initially as Richard Biffa Limited. The company's early activities centered on the collection, removal, and sale of ashes and clinker produced by coal-fired power stations in the capital, a service performed using horse-drawn carts amid the prevalence of steam-powered industrial operations.[9][10][11] During the 1920s, Biffa began building a dedicated fleet of vehicles, shifting toward motorized transport to handle increasing volumes of industrial waste more efficiently. This expansion reflected broader technological advancements in haulage and positioned the firm to serve growing urban and energy sector demands, though operations remained focused on basic waste removal rather than processing or recycling.[12][13] Biffa claims to have pioneered the introduction of the waste skip in the United Kingdom during this formative period, enabling more organized on-site collection and transport of refuse, which facilitated scalability in municipal and commercial services. By the late 1950s, second-generation involvement emerged with Richard Biffa Jr. joining the business, contributing to operational refinements ahead of post-war growth.[13][14]Post-War Expansion and Diversification
In the years immediately following World War II, Biffa capitalized on Britain's post-war reconstruction and rising urban waste volumes, expanding its core ash and clinker collection services into broader bulk waste removal for local authorities as landfill disposal gained prominence amid declining wartime recycling efforts.[12] The company's operations grew steadily through the 1950s, supported by increasing industrialization and household waste generation, though specific acquisition data from this decade remains limited in available records. Significant acceleration occurred in the early 1960s, with Biffa modernizing its vehicle fleet and extending services nationwide to handle growing municipal and industrial refuse demands during the UK's economic boom.[10] This period marked a shift toward diversified waste streams, including initial forays into hazardous and liquid wastes alongside traditional dry collections, enabling the firm to secure larger contracts and build regional depots. The pivotal 1971 acquisition by British Electric Traction (BET) for an undisclosed sum transformed Biffa, rebranding it as Biffa Waste Services and integrating it into BET's Industrial Services division, which provided capital for fleet expansion and operational scaling.[15][14] Under BET ownership, Biffa diversified further by acquiring smaller UK waste firms, enhancing capabilities in specialized collections such as liquid effluents and industrial byproducts, while developing proprietary vehicles for efficient dry and wet waste handling into the late 1970s.[16] These moves positioned Biffa as a national player, with turnover growth reflecting the era's regulatory push for organized waste management amid environmental concerns.Privatization, Acquisitions, and Modern Growth
In 2006, Biffa was demerged from Severn Trent, the water utility that had owned it since 1991, and listed on the London Stock Exchange, transitioning from subsidiary status to an independent publicly traded company focused on waste management.[13] This move valued the business at approximately £300 million at flotation and allowed it to pursue standalone strategies amid growing regulatory pressures on UK landfill use.[10] The company was subsequently taken private in a £1.2 billion leveraged buyout in 2008 by a consortium of private equity firms, Global Infrastructure Partners and Montagu Private Equity, amid a wave of such deals in the sector.[17] Biffa later returned to public listing before being delisted again following its acquisition by Energy Capital Partners (ECP) in January 2023 for an enterprise value of £2.1 billion, a transaction aimed at providing capital for expansion in a consolidating UK waste market.[18] Under ECP's ownership, Biffa has emphasized debt restructuring and merger activity to enhance operational scale and capabilities in recycling and resource recovery.[19] Post-privatization growth has been driven primarily by acquisitions, with Biffa completing at least 13 deals to broaden its service portfolio across commercial, industrial, and municipal waste streams.[20] Key transactions include the September 2024 purchase of L&S Waste Management, a specialist in construction and demolition waste handling with operations in northwest England, enhancing Biffa's regional transfer and recycling infrastructure.[21] In November 2024, Biffa acquired Keenan Recycling, a food waste collection provider in Yorkshire, expanding its anaerobic digestion and organics processing capacity to meet rising demand for compliance with UK food waste segregation mandates.[22] Further modern expansion includes the June 2024 acquisition of Hazrem Environmental, bolstering hazardous waste services, and the October 2025 completion of the full takeover of Esterform, a PET bottle manufacturer, merging it with Biffa's recycling operations to form an integrated vertical supply chain for plastics recovery and reducing reliance on imported rPET feedstock.[23][24] These moves align with Biffa's strategy to capitalize on EU-derived UK regulations promoting circular economy principles, such as bans on certain landfill disposals and incentives for energy-from-waste, positioning the firm to process over 10 million tonnes of waste annually while targeting revenue growth through diversified segments like resource management and environmental services.[25]Ownership Transitions and Recent Strategic Shifts
Biffa was demerged from Severn Trent plc in 2006, listing on the London Stock Exchange and joining the FTSE 250 index as an independent waste management entity.[11] The company was subsequently taken private in 2008 by Waste Acquisition Co Ltd, a consortium of private equity investors including Montagu Private Equity and others.[26] It returned to public markets later, maintaining its listing until September 2022, when Energy Capital Partners (ECP), a US-based infrastructure private equity firm, announced a £1.3 billion takeover offer, valuing Biffa at approximately £1.4 billion including debt.[27] The ECP acquisition completed on January 27, 2023, delisting Biffa from the LSE and marking its return to private ownership under a £2 billion enterprise value deal, with shareholders receiving 410 pence per share in cash.[28][25] This transition provided Biffa with capital to pursue growth in sustainable waste services amid regulatory pressures for recycling and circular economy initiatives in the UK.[29] Post-acquisition, Biffa has accelerated strategic shifts toward integrated recycling and low-carbon operations, exemplified by targeted acquisitions. In November 2023, it acquired Hamilton Waste and Recycling, enhancing capabilities in construction and demolition waste management across Scotland.[30] In May 2024, Biffa purchased Renewi's UK Municipal business for nominal cash plus pre-completion capitalization, bolstering its municipal collections and processing footprint to serve local authorities more comprehensively.[31] Further, in September 2024, the acquisition of L&S Waste Management reinforced expansion in industrial and commercial recycling solutions.[32] A key focus has been vertical integration in plastics recycling, with an initial 49.9% stake in Esterform—a PET pre-form and bottle manufacturer—secured in 2023, followed by full acquisition in October 2025, merging it with Biffa's PET operations including the 2023 purchase of Esterpet Ltd.[33][24] This created a closed-loop PET recycling business processing up to 25,000 tonnes annually, aligning with UK packaging reforms and extended producer responsibility mandates to scale recycling rates.[34] These moves, totaling multiple acquisitions in 2023–2025, underscore Biffa's pivot from traditional disposal toward resource recovery, driven by ECP's infrastructure investment strategy.[20]Corporate Structure and Operations
Organizational Overview and Leadership
Biffa Limited is a leading integrated waste management company in the United Kingdom, specializing in collection, treatment, recycling, and resource recovery services to support the circular economy. Headquartered in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, the company operates nationwide, serving households, businesses, and public sector clients with a workforce exceeding 10,800 employees as of 2024.[35] Following a £2.1 billion enterprise value take-private transaction completed in January 2023, Biffa is wholly owned by Energy Capital Partners, a U.S.-based infrastructure investment firm focused on energy transition and sustainability sectors.[25] [18] This ownership shift delisted Biffa from public markets, enabling a strategic emphasis on long-term investments in waste infrastructure and innovation.[36] The organization's executive leadership is headed by Chief Executive Officer Michael Topham, who joined Biffa in 2010, served as Chief Financial Officer from 2013, and assumed the CEO role in September 2018.[37] Topham, born in November 1972, has overseen expansions in sustainable operations, including energy-from-waste facilities and municipal contracts, while also chairing the Environmental Services Association since November 2023.[38] Supporting Topham is Chief Financial Officer Marc Angell, responsible for financial strategy and performance amid post-acquisition integration.[37] Operational leadership includes Chief Operating Officer for Collections and Specialist Services Maxine Mayhew, who manages frontline waste collection and specialized handling; and Chief Operating Officer for Resources and Energy Mick Davis, focusing on recycling, recovery, and energy generation assets.[37] Additional key roles encompass Chief People Officer Ally Green, overseeing human resources and workforce development; Chief Information Officer David Gooding, driving digital transformation; and General Counsel and Company Secretary Sarah Parsons, appointed in 2019, handling legal affairs and governance.[37] [39] This executive structure emphasizes operational efficiency and sustainability alignment under private equity ownership.[37]Core Services and Business Segments
Biffa's core services revolve around integrated waste management, including the collection, treatment, recycling, recovery, and disposal of various waste streams for commercial, industrial, municipal, and specialized clients across the UK. The company emphasizes sustainable practices aligned with the waste hierarchy—prioritizing reduction, reuse, recycling, and recovery over disposal—to minimize environmental impact while generating value from waste materials. These services are delivered through an extensive network of over 100 depots and facilities, supporting operations that processed significant volumes of recyclables and generated 383 GWh of electricity from waste recovery processes in recent operations.[40][41] The business is structured into three primary operating segments: Collections, Resources & Energy, and Specialist Services, which collectively enable end-to-end waste solutions from curbside pickup to resource extraction.[42][43] The Collections segment focuses on the frontline gathering of waste, encompassing industrial and commercial (I&C) collections as well as municipal contracts with local authorities. It provides tailored bin services, scheduled pickups, and on-site management to businesses and public entities, achieving a 98% weekly collection success rate. This segment also incorporates surplus food and non-food redistribution initiatives, handling 109 million items in 2022 to divert waste from disposal.[41][40][44] Resources & Energy handles downstream processing, including material recovery facilities for sorting and recycling, energy-from-waste incineration, and landfill management for residual waste. Key activities involve operating nine plastic and material recovery facilities with a capacity of 151,000 tonnes annually for rigid plastics, alongside technologies that convert non-recyclable waste into renewable energy. This segment supports closed-loop recycling, particularly in food-grade plastics, and complies with UK regulatory standards for emissions and residue handling.[45][40][46] Specialist Services addresses niche and hazardous waste requirements, incorporating sub-operations such as hazardous waste treatment, industrial resource management (IRM), packaging recovery via Biffpack, and cleaning services through CSG. These services target complex industrial clients needing compliant handling of dangerous materials, event waste management, and specialized decontamination, extending Biffa's capabilities beyond standard collections to high-risk environments.[43][47][48]Key Facilities and Infrastructure
Biffa's infrastructure supports its waste management operations through a nationwide network of over 100 processing facilities, including materials recovery facilities (MRFs), waste transfer stations, landfills, and specialized recovery plants, alongside depots servicing 95% of UK postcodes.[45][49] These assets enable collection, sorting, recovery, and disposal of approximately 7.2 million tonnes of waste annually from business and local authority contracts.[50] Materials Recovery Facilities (MRFs): Biffa operates multiple MRFs for automated sorting of co-mingled recyclables such as paper, plastics, and metals from residential and commercial sources. Key examples include the Edmonton MRF in north London, the UK's second-largest facility capable of high-volume processing, and the Minworth MRF in the West Midlands. Other notable sites are the Milton Keynes MRF, Chelson Meadow MRF in Plymouth, and Broxburn MRF in Scotland, which handles recyclables transferred from regional stations.[51][52][53][54] Waste Transfer Stations: The company maintains over 50 transfer stations for consolidating waste volumes to optimize transport efficiency to downstream processing or disposal sites, minimizing road haulage emissions. A recent addition is the zero-to-landfill transfer station in Inverness, opened on July 3, 2025, which diverts recyclables directly to MRFs like Broxburn while rejecting landfill-bound residuals.[55][54] Landfills: Biffa manages a portfolio of permitted landfill sites for inert, non-hazardous, and hazardous residual waste following recovery prioritization. Prominent facilities include Redhill Landfill in Surrey, Westmill Landfill in Hertfordshire (with operations permitted until December 31, 2021, subject to extensions), North Herts Landfill near Hitchin, Colnbrook Landfill in Berkshire, and Kilsby Landfill near Rugby in Warwickshire. At Horsham Landfill in West Sussex—one of 14 operational landfills—the site integrates a 25-tonne-per-hour street sweepings recycling plant using wet processing technology to recover aggregates and sands.[56][57][58][59][60] Energy-from-Waste and Specialized Infrastructure: Biffa has historically invested in or supplied energy-from-waste (EfW) capabilities, including feedstock provision to the Newhurst ERF near Shepshed in Leicestershire, which began operations in June 2023 and processes non-recyclable refuse-derived fuel into electricity and heat. In June 2025, Biffa sold its 50% stake in Newhurst and 25% stake in a second unnamed EfW facility to Encyclis, retaining operational ties for waste supply from local collections. Complementary specialized plants include a bulky waste and persistent organic pollutants (POPs) processing system installed at the Milton Keynes facility in July 2025, enhancing recovery of reusable materials from large items. Biffa also operates plastics reprocessing sites, though the Washington facility in Sunderland closed in July 2025 due to market challenges in polymer recycling.[61][62][63][64]Acquisitions and Expansions
Biffa has pursued inorganic growth primarily through acquisitions of regional and specialized waste management firms, enhancing its capabilities in commercial collections, recycling, and resource recovery across the UK. Following its delisting from the London Stock Exchange after acquisition by Energy Capital Partners in January 2023, the company intensified its merger and acquisition activity, completing at least six deals between 2023 and 2025 to bolster segments like food waste processing, construction and demolition (C&D) materials, and plastics recycling.[65][20] In March 2023, Biffa acquired Total Recycling Services, a Darlington-based provider of industrial and commercial waste services, expanding its northern England footprint in mixed waste handling and recycling.[11][66] Later that year, on November 28, 2023, it purchased Hamilton Waste and Recycling Limited, a Midlands-based operator specializing in commercial waste collections and C&D recycling, which strengthened Biffa's regional service density and added transfer station infrastructure.[30] The pace accelerated in 2024 with four acquisitions. In May 2024, Biffa agreed to buy Renewi's UK Municipal business, a collections and processing operation serving local authorities, with completion expected by year-end pending regulatory approvals; this deal targeted growth in household waste contracts amid UK policy shifts toward mandatory food waste collections.[31] In June 2024, it acquired Hazrem Environmental, further diversifying into hazardous waste handling.[23] By September 2024, Biffa completed the purchase of L&S Waste Management, a Hampshire-based C&D recycler, adding skip hire and materials recovery capabilities in southern England.[67] Subsequent deals included the November 1, 2024, acquisition of Keenan Recycling, an Edinburgh-headquartered firm focused on commercial food waste collections across Scotland, England, and Wales, positioning Biffa to meet impending national regulations on organic waste segregation.[68][69] In October 2025, Biffa fully acquired Esterform, a PET pre-form and bottle manufacturer, integrating it with existing recycling operations to form Esterpret and scale closed-loop plastics recovery amid UK circular economy targets.[70] These moves have collectively expanded Biffa's annual processing capacity and geographic coverage, though specific financial terms for most transactions remain undisclosed.[24] Earlier expansions included the 2002 acquisitions of Reclamation and Disposal Ltd and White Cross Ltd from Severn Trent, which augmented Biffa's landfill and disposal assets during its public listing phase.[15] Organic expansions, such as investments in energy-from-waste facilities and fleet modernization, have complemented these buys but represent a smaller portion of recent growth drivers.[71]Financial Performance and Market Position
Revenue, Profitability, and Key Metrics
Biffa's statutory revenue reached £1,443.2 million for the fiscal year ended March 29, 2024, marking a 3% increase from the prior year amid steady demand in commercial and municipal waste services.[72][73] Net revenue, excluding third-party processing fees, totaled £1,363.9 million for the same period.[73] These figures reflect operational resilience despite market pressures such as fluctuating recyclate prices and regulatory changes in the UK waste sector. Cash generation from operations amounted to £144.6 million in FY24, supporting investments in infrastructure and acquisitions.[73] The company's leverage ratio stood at 2.9 times, with group net debt at £595.8 million, indicating a manageable debt burden post-privatization by Energy Capital Partners in 2022.[73] Detailed profitability metrics, including EBITDA or net profit, remain undisclosed publicly following Biffa's delisting from the London Stock Exchange, limiting transparency compared to its public era. Key operational metrics include processing volumes, which declined slightly to approximately 10 million metric tons of waste in FY24 from prior peaks, influenced by economic slowdowns and shifts toward resource recovery.[74] In May 2024, Biffa acquired Renewi plc's UK municipal operations for £204 million, integrating an additional £150 million in annual revenue and expanding its contract backlog to over £1 billion, positioning for enhanced FY25 performance.[75]Competitive Landscape in UK Waste Management
The UK waste management sector operates in a moderately concentrated market, where a few large firms handle the majority of commercial, industrial, and municipal waste collection, processing, and disposal, while smaller regional operators serve niche or local needs. Leading competitors to Biffa include Veolia UK, SUEZ UK, FCC Environment, Renewi plc, and remnants of Viridor (now under KKR ownership following partial divestitures). These entities compete on factors such as contract bidding for public sector services, operational scale, regulatory compliance, and capabilities in recycling and resource recovery, amid tightening EU-derived environmental standards post-Brexit.[76][77] Veolia maintains the largest share in non-hazardous waste collection, leveraging its multinational resources for integrated services across collection, treatment, and energy recovery. Biffa, by contrast, commands a leading position in hazardous waste collection and treatment, bolstered by specialized facilities and expertise in handling complex streams like chemical and clinical waste. In material recovery facilities (MRFs), Biffa operates approximately 18% of UK sites, including assets integrated from acquisitions, positioning it strongly in downstream recycling processing. Biffa's £1.443 billion revenue in fiscal year 2022 underscores its scale as the second-largest player by turnover, trailing Veolia's £3.308 billion but surpassing SUEZ (£713 million) and Viridor (£648 million).[78][79][80][81] Industry dynamics feature ongoing consolidation to achieve economies of scale and meet demands for advanced infrastructure, such as energy-from-waste plants and automated sorting. Biffa's 2021 acquisition of Viridor's collections business and select recycling assets for £126 million expanded its industrial and commercial footprint, adding wastewater treatment capabilities and securing long-term customer relationships. Similar moves, including FCC Environment's 2025 purchase of Cumbria Waste Group, reflect a broader trend where firms consolidate to navigate rising compliance costs and invest in circular economy technologies, intensifying rivalry in high-margin segments like resource recovery.[82][83][84]Sustainability and Environmental Initiatives
Resource Recovery and Circular Economy Efforts
Biffa emphasizes resource recovery through advanced processing facilities that separate and repurpose waste materials, diverting them from landfills to support circular economy principles. The company's recycling operations recover plastics, metals, paper, and organics, transforming them into raw materials or products for reuse. In its network of materials recovery facilities (MRFs), Biffa employs technologies such as optical sorting and magnetic separation to achieve high-purity outputs.[45] Since 2016, Biffa has committed over £50 million to plastics infrastructure, enabling annual recycling of more than 150,000 tonnes across sites including Seaham, Redcar, and Sherburn.[85] A notable example was the PET plastic recovery plant in Washington, operational from 2022 until its closure in 2024 amid market challenges, which used optical sorters to remove contaminants like PVC and produced food-grade PET flakes, diverting 1,600 tonnes of waste plastic into the supply chain.[85] Biffa advances circularity via partnerships, such as with Polytag for UV-tagged packaging at its Teesside MRF, providing lifecycle tracking data for retailers like Ocado Retail, Co-op, and Aldi to improve recovery rates.[86] Another initiative, ReBorn Homeware, developed in collaboration with Brunel University London, converts recycled plastics into consumer goods like washing-up bowls and dishrags, funded partly by UK Research and Innovation.[86] To optimize recovery, Biffa has deployed IoT sensors at 70 Northern Trains stations for real-time monitoring of recycling volumes, reducing unnecessary collections and enhancing efficiency.[86] The company supports surplus material redistribution in manufacturing and endorses deposit return schemes to boost returns of bottles and cans.[87] Sustainability targets include a 50% increase in business waste recycling collections to 0.75 million tonnes annually, aligning with broader goals to minimize resource depletion.[88] In February 2025, Biffa launched bins containing 80% recycled high-density polyethylene (HDPE) through a partnership with Contenur UK, exemplifying closed-loop manufacturing.[89] These efforts reflect Biffa's role in scaling circular practices, though challenges like fluctuating markets highlight dependencies on economic viability.[85]Energy-from-Waste and Innovation Achievements
Biffa operates Energy Recovery Facilities (ERFs) that incinerate non-recyclable residual waste to generate electricity, supporting the diversion of material from landfills. The Newhurst ERF in Leicestershire commenced operations in June 2023, with an annual processing capacity of 350,000 tonnes and electricity generation of 42 megawatts (MW), equivalent to powering approximately 80,000 households.[90] The Protos ERF in Cheshire, slated for operational start in 2024, offers a capacity of 400,000 tonnes per year and 49 MW of output, while featuring potential integration with carbon capture and storage technology to sequester up to 38,000 tonnes of CO2 equivalent annually.[90] These facilities form part of a £75 million investment by Biffa in ERF infrastructure, yielding a combined renewable energy contribution of up to 91 MW to the UK grid.[90] Complementing incineration-based recovery, Biffa employs anaerobic digestion (AD) to process organic waste such as food and green materials into biogas, which is converted to electricity and digestate for agricultural use. The Poplars AD plant stands as one of the UK's most efficient, with a maximum output of 6.5 MW—sufficient to supply around 15,000 homes—and continuous 24/7 operation.[90] Biffa further captures over 85% of methane emissions from its closed landfill sites, channeling the gas into the power grid to mitigate greenhouse gas releases.[91] Historically, Biffa has exported roughly 500,000 tonnes of refuse-derived fuel (RDF) annually from its production sites to European combined heat and power facilities, facilitating energy recovery where domestic capacity is limited.[92] In process innovations, Biffa recovers ferrous and non-ferrous metals alongside aggregates from ERF incinerator bottom ash for recycling into construction materials, enhancing resource efficiency.[90] The company has developed advanced optical sorting technology to separate contaminated polyethylene terephthalate (PET) flakes from mixed waste streams, diverting 1,600 tonnes into reprocessing for circular economy applications as of May 2023.[93] Additional advancements include trials of ultraviolet (UV) 2D tagging systems on plastic bottles for traceability at materials recovery facilities and deployment of Internet of Things (IoT)-enabled smart bin sensors across 70 railway stations to optimize recycling data collection in real time.[86] These efforts underscore Biffa's role in bridging waste processing gaps, with its sustainability and innovation initiatives earning victories in two categories at the 2024 National Recycling Awards.[6]Measurable Environmental Impacts and Metrics
Biffa has reported a 37% reduction in its Scope 1 and 2 greenhouse gas emissions since the 2019 baseline, measured as of 2024, primarily through fleet electrification, route optimization, and fuel transitions such as high-viscosity oil (HVO).[35] This follows a 30% reduction achieved by 2023, with Scope 3 emissions targeted for a 25% cut by 2030 from a 2022 baseline.[90] Overall, the company claims a 70% emissions decline since 2002, driven by waste diversion from landfills and increased recovery processes.[94] These targets, including the 50% Scope 1 and 2 reduction by 2030, have been validated by the Science Based Targets initiative as aligned with limiting global warming to 1.5°C.[95] In waste management, Biffa processed and recycled 559,000 tonnes of plastics in the UK during the reporting period ending 2024, alongside a 19% increase in business waste recycling volumes to 605,000 tonnes since 2019.[35][90] Landfill diversion efforts include operations like Hamilton Waste and Recycling, which achieve 99% diversion of incoming waste through sorting and recovery.[35] The company diverted 45,000 tonnes of surplus food and non-food items from waste in 2024, contributing to broader circular economy outcomes.[35] Energy-from-waste facilities provide additional metrics: the Newhurst energy recovery facility (ERF), commissioned in 2023, processes 350,000 tonnes of waste annually to generate 42 MW of electricity, while the planned Protos ERF targets 400,000 tonnes and 49 MW starting in 2025.[35][90] Anaerobic digestion at sites like Poplars produced 4.37 million kWh of electricity in the latest reported year.[90] Biffa has expanded alternative-fuelled vehicles to 158 since 2020 and improved collection route efficiency by 9%, further reducing operational emissions.[35]| Metric | Achievement (as of 2023-2024) | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Scope 1 & 2 GHG Reduction (from 2019) | 37% | 50% by 2030 |
| Business Waste Recycling Increase (from 2019) | 19% (605,000 tonnes) | 50% by 2030 |
| Plastics Recycled (annual) | 559,000 tonnes | N/A |
| Waste to ERFs (Newhurst annual) | 350,000 tonnes | N/A |
| Electricity from AD (Poplars) | 4.37 million kWh | N/A |