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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20161013T190000
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DTSTAMP:20260421T000412
CREATED:20161005T161835Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220916T125746Z
UID:5963-1476385200-1476392400@metalculture.com
SUMMARY:Waste Not\, Want Not
DESCRIPTION:  Almost 50% of the total amount of food thrown away in the UK comes from homes. This equates to 7 million tonnes of food and drink each year\, and more than half of this is food we could have eaten. \n·         4600 KILOCALORIES per day of food are harvested for every person on the planet; of these\, only around 2000 on average are eaten – more than half of it is lost on the way. \nBOOK YOUR FREE PLACE HERE.  \nWaste Not Want Not brings together a wealth of inspiration and experience from activists keen to reduce food waste and find new ways to make sure everyone has access to good food. Chaired by Ian Tennant this won’t be a case of telling us what to do – more a case of sharing some view points and inviting us all to join the discussion on what we can do to make an impact both nationally and locally. Locally initiatives such as Food Cycle\, Peterborough in Transition and the Women’s Institute will provide solid examples of what is already happening locally as well as offering ways to get involved. \nAbout the panel: \nCorin Bell is Director of Manchester’s Real Junk Food Project (RJFP). She is also a trustee at the Real Junk Food Charitable Foundation\, which launched towards the end of last year and supports sustainable and food waste projects across the UK. Corin started the Real Junk Food Project Manchester after becoming disillusioned with existing models attempting to tackle food waste and food poverty. Social exclusion is increasingly affecting our society\, and a great number of projects that target those in food poverty also segregate and isolate those people from the mainstream. She became interested in alternate economic models and operates Real Junk Food Manchester on a pay-as-you-feel basis. Their project also aims to balance practical action with constant campaigning to shift our broken food system. She feels very strongly that when working in a social or environmental problem\, the only ethical stance is to aim to make your role redundant by creating a system where you are no longer needed. \nRead more about Corin and the Real Junk Food Project here: \nhttp://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/first-food-waste-supermarket-uk-leeds-real-junk-food-project-a7317906.html \nhttp://therealjunkfoodproject.org/ \nhttps://www.theguardian.com/membership/2015/jul/03/the-real-junk-food-projects-corin-bell-on-fighting-food-waste-in-manchester \n·         Food Cycle is a national charity that combines volunteers\, surplus food and spare kitchen spaces to create tasty\, nutritious meals for people at risk of food poverty and social isolation. The Peterborough Food Cycle was set up earlier this year and serves tasty three-course meals on Thursdays (12.30 – 2pm) from Westgate Church. They provide communal dining experiences to those in need or anyone who wishes to attend. \n·         Find out more at: http://foodcycle.org.uk \nVera Zakharov is the Love Food Hate Waste Project Coordinator at the Brighton & Hove Food Partnership. She works across sectors in Brighton & Hove to support a joined up effort to tackle food waste and promote more food-sharing. Since 2010\, the project has worked with individuals\, community groups\, food businesses\, the council\, universities\, and projects utilising surplus food in promoting and facilitating the actions outlined in the Food Waste Hierarchy.  Vera is also the Sussex Gleaning Coordinator for the Gleaning Network UK\, coordinating volunteers\, farmers and food redistribution charities to harvest farm surplus produce and direct this fresh\, nutritious food to people in need. The project aims to raise awareness about the urgent issue of food waste on farms\, and to change the retailer policies and consumer cultures that lead to this waste. \n\nMore info about food waste action in Brighton & Hove: http://bhfood.org.uk/Blog/top-10-fabulous-food-waste-projects-in-our-city \nMore info about the Gleaning Network: http://feedbackglobal.org/campaigns/gleaning-network/ \nInfo & video about Feeding the 5000 Brighton: http://bhfood.org.uk/feeding-the-5000-brighton \n\n\nThe Women’s Institute: We are joined by representatives from peterborough and Huntingdon WI. Formed in 1915\, the WI has a long history of campaigning on a wide range of issues. WI Campaigns are about changing things for the better and tackling the issues that matter to members.83% of delegates voted in support of the NFWIs 2016 resolution to ‘avoid food waste and address food poverty’. The resolution calls on supermarkets to sign up to a voluntary agreement to avoid food waste\, as well as to pass surplus food on to charities to help address the issue of food poverty in the UK. \nFind out more at: https://www.thewi.org.uk/campaigns/current-campaigns-and-initiatives/avoid-food-waste\,-address-food-poverty
URL:https://metalculture.com/whats-on/waste-not-want-not/
LOCATION:Metal Peterborough\, Chauffeur's Cottage\, St Peter's Road\, Peterborough\, PE1 1YX
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://metalculture.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/Screen-Shot-2016-10-05-at-16.38.48.jpg
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20160722T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/London:20160828T170000
DTSTAMP:20260421T000412
CREATED:20160411T100442Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220920T114401Z
UID:4833-1469181600-1472403600@metalculture.com
SUMMARY:RESIDENT
DESCRIPTION:  \nMost cities share a complex and evolving dialogue between the rural and urban\, the industrial and agricultural\, the built environment and green spaces. This is particularly true of Peterborough now\, with its rapid expansion of housing\, population and economic growth alongside its environmental aspirations. \nLand and the environment more generally\, is becoming a contested space with its uses debated and strategized over. \nArtists Jessie Brennan\, Marc Atkinson and Matt Lewis have all spent the last year ‘in residence’ in the city\, hosted by arts organisation Metal\, exploring these tensions and working directly with local residents to capture the changes\, and their views and concerns through sound recordings\, video\, and photography. \n  \nFriday 22nd July – Sunday 28th August 2016 \nCity Gallery Peterborough \nOpen: Tuesday – Sunday\, 10am – 5pm \nOpen Mondays (School holidays and Bank Holidays)\, 10am – 5pm (last admission 4.30pm) \nRead more about the exhibition Resident here.  \n  \n \n \n \n  \n \nHave a listen to the Resonance FM show who feature an interview with all three artists here…Resonance FM.  \nPhotos by Sandra Keating and Marc Atkinson.
URL:https://metalculture.com/whats-on/resident/
LOCATION:Metal Peterborough\, Chauffeur's Cottage\, St Peter's Road\, Peterborough\, PE1 1YX
CATEGORIES:Featured
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://metalculture.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Untitled3.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Metal":MAILTO:Ruth@metalculture.com
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