Tag Archives: Glastonbury

Eco-lites up the Pilton Party!

The annual Pilton Party, held in September at Worthy Farm as a big “thank you”  from the Glastonbury Festival to crew, staff, supporters, suppliers and local residents, was lit for the first time by  the amazing ‘ecolitrs’ – which Glastonbury say will become Festival standard issue next year. You can see the lights in the Mandy Briggs film from the Party here which featured headliners Plan B along with The Treetop Flyers (who won the Glastonbury Emerging Talent competition), Hot Rats and Magnus Puto.

20 Ecolite lighting towers were deployed at the Party but the Festival itself  currently has 175 lighting towers to illuminate car parks, camp sites and surrounding roads for the 5 day event using more than 16,000 litres of fuel. The Ecolite is approximately 75% more efficient than a traditional 1,000W lighting tower and will be equipped with dusk to dawn auto switching meaning that the lights will switch themselves on when it starts to get dark and turn themselves off again when it starts to get light. In addition to these savings the Ecolite can be run from another generator (using only 600W) or can be connected together running up to four additional slave lights from one unit.

In total it is calculated that by switching all 175 towers to Ecolite, Glastonbury would reduce their CO2 emissions by more than 63 tonnes. It would also mean that no refuelling would be required throughout the festival due to the 170 hour run time from a single tank cutting labour costs, additional transport costs and emissions.

Another benefit that has attracted Glastonbury to the Ecolite is the quite running generator that operates at only 83-86dBa LWA depending on specification, making it the quietest lighting tower in the world. Light pollution is also reduced by focusing the light through a patented prismatic lens meaning 80% of the light generated is focused on the desired area.

PHOTO BY JASON BRYANT.

Mandy Briggs’s short film is here http://vimeo.com/29678275

And more on Ecolites here http://www.youngmangroup.com/lighting-towers/

Coldplay top headliners poll

Coldplay have been voted the best festival headliner of 2011, in an online poll conducted by BBC 6 Music. The band – who headlined Glastonbury and T In The Park – topped the survey with 22.7% of votes cast, breakfast show host Shaun Keaveny announced. US rock band The National came in second with 14.2%, while Muse were third with 13.9%. Coldplay’s drummer Will Champion told 6 Music playing festivals gave the band “a chance to win people over” and added ”But there’s also a strong possibility that people have already made their mind up about you,” he added, “and no matter how well you play they’re not going to be happy about it.”

Picture of Coldplay at Glastonbury 2011 by Denis O’Regan

(C) 2011

Glastonbury cans it!

The Glastonbury Festival have revealed that over 2 tonnes of drinks cans from the Festival were sent to Perrys recycling centre in Marston Magna in Somerset after this year’s festival, picked up by the Festivals dedicated team of litter pickers who clean the site by hand.

Glastonbury also announced that their ‘Green Traveller’ scheme was a real success in 2011, with car parking and car numbers being reduced for the first time. Car numbers were down by 4,600 vehicles. Green Travellers who came by bike or public transport were given their own camping area and discount vouchers for on-site facilities.

Glastonbury also said that despite a blisteringly hot final day, water use on site at the festival was down in 2011 as well. The Festival installed its own reservoirs last year and also swapped sewage disposal to a local farm, saving tankers having to bring drinking water on site and take human waste off site to a sewage plant near the coast.

U2 recycle 360

U2, who pleased the crowds on a rain sodden day at Glastonbury last Friday,  have announced that they are going to ‘recycle’ their massive 360° tour stage set. The band’s Tour Director Craig Evans told Billboard: “It’s certainly our intention to see these things recycled into permanent and usable ventures. It represents too great an engineering feat to just use for the tour and put away in a warehouse somewhere.We are now in discussions to send them into different places around the world and have them installed as permanent venues. Some major events have shown interest in these, from four different continents – and we haven’t even really put the word out yet” adding ”They’re something you can put up on a waterfront and become an instant skyline icon. We know that the inquiries will keep coming in. Having been part of the biggest tour of all time, they’re pretty well tried and tested. They can carry weights no other structure can consider, and since they’re already developed and designed you can probably complete [a venue] in a one-month period instead of a two-year build period”.

in April 2011 U2′s 360° tour overtook the Rolling Stones’ Bigger Bang tour as the highest grossing tour of all time, making £341m with 20 gigs to go.

If you want to support the work of Greenpeace, Oxfam and WaterAid you can download three exclusive live tracks from the three Pyramid Stage headliners at Glastonbury 2011 - U2′s I Will Follow, Coldplay’s In My Place and Beyonce’s Irreplaceable until the end of July on iTunes – see more at http://www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk/news/download-u2-beyonce-and-coldplay-performances-on-itunes-raising-funds-for-glastonburys-charities

Photo: Denis O’Regan at Glastonbury 2011

Experience a (green) trip to Glastonbury

Luke writes – If you’re lucky enough to be heading down to Glastonbury this year, why not do what I’m doing and take the most environmentally sustainable option available?  Our friends at ‘Big Green Coach’ pledge to plant two trees for every coach they take to any festival in the UK – it was therefore an easy and obvious choice that I would turn to them to get me down to Glastonbury whilst being as green as possible.

As if that wasn’t enough, they are also the cheapest option I’ve seen anywhere too (at just £41 return from Hatton Cross, London).

Amazingly, they do still have some tickets available leaving London on both Wednesday & Thursday (returning Monday)…

Go to: www.biggreencoach.co.uk/glastonbury for more details and booking.

Glastonbury launch Green Traders Awards 2011

Glastonbury has announced that they are running Festival’s own Green Traders Awards for the sixth time, with the prestigious gongs awarded by Glastonbury, Greenpeace,The Soil Association, The Fairtrade Foundation and Nationwide Caterers Association(NCASS) to the traders who do the most to help make Glastonbury greener, fairer and more sustainable.

Greenpeace volunteers proactively cover the Festival site interviewing traders, quizzing them about everything from how they arrived on site to what their stall was made of,  how much of their stock was Fairtrade, organic or recycled, and any other ethical criteria used to reduce their impact on the environment.

You can see more at
http://www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk/news/green-trader-awards-return-for-2011

LET THE TRAIN TAKE THE STRAIN

Raileasy, The Glastonbury Festival’s official rail partner, has two tickets to give away in a competition for entry to the sold out Festival. RailEasy are also offering some ecclusive rail travel packages to the Festival including a free coach shuttle from Cranmore station to the Festival site. Raileasy’s exclusive train service  offers Festival goers the opportunity to travel on the Glastonbury Express from London and from Preston, Bolton, Manchester, Crewe and Stoke-on-Trent and you can find out more at http://glastonbury.raileasy.co.uk/

You can also book on to the regular rail services that run to Castle Carey – again a free shuttle operates to the Festival site and to Bristol stations where a coach services operates which can be paid for on the day. For more on winning tickets and regular services see  http://new.raileasy.co.uk/offers-and-things-to-do/things-to-do/glastonbury-festival-2011/glastonbury-festival-2011

Greenpeace asks performers to raise their voices at Glasters

CMU Daily reports that Greenpeace will set up a recording studio – made out of wood and straw – at the Glastonbury Festival this year and will encourage all sorts of artist  to record songs about the environmental and economic issues that are affecting the world right now.   Greenpeace said ”We’re calling for left-field artists, musicians and writers; everyone who opposes environmental destruction, exploitation, corruption, manipulation and fraud – the things that have become staple fodder of the increasingly half-baked media reports we routinely ignore. Raising Voices aims to use the uniquely positive atmosphere that is Glastonbury to build momentum around the protest song”.

The eco-group has teamed up with producer Joe Leach of Cowshed Studio London to create the temporary recording space, and a video feed from inside it will allow festival goers to see what is going on. Any artists or labels interested in getting involved should email glasto@cowshedstudio.com

Michael Eavis talks about solar on Radio 4!

You can hear Glastonbury Festival Organiser Michael Eavis speaking about his new solar panels at Worthy Farm on Radio 4 on the BBc iPlayer here http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b0100grj in the programme ‘Costing The Earth’ – this episode called ‘Fields Paved With God’ and here http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006r4wn/episodes/player

Treetop Flyers top Glastonbury Emerging Talent 2011

Treetop Flyers celebrate their win with Michael Eavis

Five piece London based folk rock/country blues outfit Treetop Flyers have won the prestigious Glastonbury Festival Emerging Talent Competition 2011 in a hard fought battle that saw them secure a main stage slot at the 2011 Festival. Other finalists were Emily & The Woods, J-Treole, My First Tooth, My Tiger My Timing, Tristram, Twin Brother and Louise & The Pins. The two day finals event also saw performances from four ‘judges selections’ who were Subsource, L.A.C, Kamal Arafa & the Moonlight Band and Freddie Dickson. Promoter Michael Eavis promised that a number of the runner up bands would get bookings on different stages accross the Festival and A Greener Festival have promised that some of the bands – and there were some GREAT bands this year – would appear on their 2011 ‘Festivals Harvest’ CD which is sponsored by DMS.

Glastonbury’s emerging talent competition attracted more than 7,500 entries and the initial long list was made by a team of 40 music bloggers who listened to every entry. The event was streamed live on www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk (there are some photos there too) and judges on the night included agent Angus Baskerville, Glastonbury Acoustic Stage booker and agent Paul Charles, Glastonbury Dance Village programmer Malcolm Haynes, West Holts Stage programmer Steve Symons, Glastonbury Music Booking co-ordinator Nick Dewey, Guardian journalist Chris Salmon, BBC Radio producer Phillipa Aylott and Festival organisers Emily Eavis and Michael Eavis. More at http://www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk/news/treetop-flyers-win-etc-2011

GREENER FESTIVALS NEWS

GLASTONBURY FESTIVAL has already announced U2, Coldplay and Beyonce as Pyramid Stage headliners for an amazing weekend of fun  - and have now announced some green travel initiatives for 2011. As one of the world’s largest outdoor gatherings, Glastonbury Festival is totally committed to reducing carbon emissions – and to raising awareness of what can be done to help combat climate change. Michael and Emily Eavis have already installed solar panels on the roofs of all of the farm buildings at Worthy Farm, providing enough sustainable power for 40 homes in the village of Pilton, and has also built on-site reservoirs to save on transporting water to the site and has new greener sewage plans on a nearby farm, saving on transporting sewage away. Now as part of the ‘Love the farm, leave no trace’ message, the Festival wants to reward people for choosing to come to Somerset by public transport or by bicycle. So, this year, for the first time, Glastonbury  have put together a Glastonbury Festival Green Traveller package which they hope will provide an extra incentive for you and your friends to “go Green”. Ticket holders who arrive at the Festival by public transport or bicycle will be given a Green Traveller lanyard, offering vouchers for discounts on main meals, solar showers, solely provided for Green Travellers, access to beautiful clean compost toilets and  a generous discount on a Festival T-shirt. Over 50 per cent of Glastonbury Festival’s CO2 total emissions come from how “you” the Festival goers makes your way to the site. Glastonbury says “We understand that public transport can be expensive and we are working on trying to keep the prices fair. And yes, we know that getting on a train or bus isn’t necessarily as easy as jumping in a car parked outside your house. But once you have decided to head for your bike, the bus stop or the train station, we’ll do our best to make Festival life a little bit easier for you – from the moment you’re dropped right by the gate!” Glastonbury will be posting more information on the Green Traveller scheme (and how it will work) soon www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk

WAVEFORM are pushing pedal power for 2011 and hope to run a stage powered by six bikes pedalled by up to 400 volunteers over the festival weekend  – in fact the bikes may be reduced to four or five if the stage is too loud! The stage will also have pedalled powered LED lights and some spinning heads – and Waveform are also looking at recycled LED light installations and solar and wind power options too.

T IN THE PARK have a host of new and revised green initiatives. Green T is the environmental policy in place at T in the Park.  In 2010 T took the 10:10 pledge to reduce carbon emissions by 10% and adopted the motto is redeem, reduce and recycle and T want to keep the green fields of Balado blooming! All food containers sold at the event are now biodegradable and all food vendors must abide by this in all their products.  They must not use plastic, polystyrene or other non bio-degradable serving trays boxes, cups, cutlery etc and condiments must not be single serving.  Waste bins, wheelie bins and recycling bins are located around the site and vendors are told that cardboard must be flat packed and put in the recycling bins. In order to reduce energy use and emissions T will be measuring this in 2011 to establish the baseline, and it will be measured in accordance with Industry Green: a framework developed especially for music festivals by Julie’s Bicycle, a not for profit organisation helping the music industry go green – T is one of the first Scottish events to have signed up to the Industry Green programme. T have also introduced recycling into the campsite: one clear bag for plastic bottles, cans and paper, and a bin bag for all food waste (including all food packaging and cutlery). T Trash Trailers make their daily rounds in the campsite collecting everyone’s bin and recycling bags – and all crew catering waste will be composted rather than going to landfill. T in the Park was the first UK festival to introduce cup recycling and there are three strands to this:  REDEEM – when you buy your drinks tokens onsite, there is an additional 10p deposit charged for your cup. When you’ve finished your drink you take your empty cup to one of the cup recycling points around the festival and we redeem it for a shiny new 10p! REDUCE – we’re always trying to find new ways to reduce T’s impact on the environment, and that includes reducing the effect litter and waste has on the site too and finally  RECYCLE – every cup collected through the initiative will be fully recycled, reducing the landfill waste which leaves Balado.

Grey water is collected from all showers onsite, and this is used for priming toilets after they have been cleaned. With so many toilets being cleaned 3-4 times a day, this saves huge amounts of water, and reduces the tanker miles of water coming to site, & waste water being taken away from site. This reduction in tanker miles makes significant reductions in tanker miles CO2 emissions. As T in the Park takes place within the catchment of Loch Leven, which is a designated ‘Site of Special Scientific Interest’, T always ensures that all water and waste water issues do not damage the sensitive environment. T’s toilet paper and hand towels are made from 100% recycled materials and come from commercial forests not from conservation areas: these managed forests plant three new trees for every one cut down.

Finally, T’s campsite will be lit with low energy festoon lighting, staff use bicycles to get around the site (it’s the quickest and greenest way of getting about!) and T in the Park recognises the important educational role festivals have to play, and has created a dedicated environmental area called The Eco Village situated within Healthy T. The area promotes the green message whilst not losing sight that everyone is there to have fun, and naturally it’s solar powered.

The CROISSANT NEUF SUMMER PARTY have won the PEA AWARD for arts and music – the award honours individuals who have used any form of the arts to raise awareness on environmental issues. It is also for those that have adopted sustainable or ethical practices in producing their art.

And talking of JULIES BICYCLE, the UK’s cross music initiative on climate change has announced that six UK venues will be getting the IG mark to reward their green efforts. The six venues are Wembley Stadium, Cardiff International Arena, Motorpoint Arena Sheffield, O2 Apollo Manchester, Southampton Guildhall and the Capital FM Arena in Nottingham. Julies Bicycle Director Alison Tickell said “We are delighted to announce the award of IG certificates to six of the UK’s most high profile live music venues. All have demonstrated their strong commitment to reducing their environmental impact and join a community of creative industry leaders that are setting the standard for environmentally responsible business practices through their transparency and accountability”.

Finally, Ben Challis from A Greener Festival, Fruzsina Szep from the Sziget Festival in Hungary, Daniel Barcza from the Moholy-Nagy Arts University and Andras Gross from the Medence Group were all speakers at the ‘New Ways and New Trends in Arts Management’ held at the British Embassy in Budapest on March 3rd looking at sustainable development in arts management.  You can see more at  http://en.artsandbusiness.hu/. Both Ben and Fruzsina have contributed chapters to a just published Hungarian book of the same name.

Green Glasto travellers to be treated like royalty!

Glastonbury 2011 has already annnounced U2, Coldplay and Beyonce as Pyramid Stage headliners for an amazing weekend of fun  - and this from from www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk :

As one of the world’s largest outdoor gatherings, Glastonbury Festival is totally committed to reducing carbon emissions – and to raising awareness of what can be done to help combat climate change. As part of that message, the Festival wants to reward people for choosing to come to Somerset by public transport or by bicycle. So, this year, for the first time, we have put together a Glastonbury Festival Green Traveller package which we hope will provide an extra incentive for you and your friends to “go Green”.

Ticket holders who arrive at the Festival by public transport or bicycle will be given a Green Traveller lanyard, offering:
 
- Vouchers for discounts on main meals
- Solar showers, solely provided for Green Travellers
- Access to compost toilets
- Discount on a Festival T-shirt

Over 50 per cent of Glastonbury Festival’s CO2 total emissions come from how “you” the Festival goer make your way to the site. We understand that public transport can be expensive and we are working on trying to keep the prices fair.

And yes, we know that getting on a train or bus isn’t necessarily as easy as jumping in a car parked outside your house. But once you have decided to head for your bike, the bus stop or the train station, we’ll do our best to make Festival life a little bit easier for you – from the moment you’re dropped right by the gate!

Glastonbury will be posting more information on the Green Traveller scheme (and how it will work) soon…

so more at www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk

Sustainable temporary power solutions

Bredenoord Aggregaten is a Dutch firm that is at the forefront of new developments in sustainable temporary energy systems. In the future Bredenoord wants to maintain and expand its position as market leader in North-West Europe. They recently exhibited their new hydrogen cell generators at the Glastonbury Festival in the UK and the Lowlands festival in Holland. Bredenoor are looking to develop a fully sustainable temporary mobile generator system and they are working on the development and application of completely different techniques than the current diesel units, including fuel cell technology (Purity and soon Uniflex)

Paul Schurink from Bredenoord gave a really interesting presentation at GREEN EVENTS GERMANY in early November in Bonn and explainend that to avoid having to wait for technological breakthroughs, Bredenoord are working on improving their existing diesel generators. Developments which have already been fully established include the integrated drip pan and super silent models. Recently “Clear Air” was added in this range and Bredenoord will start with the application of GTL diesel. Bredenoord have already started to replace conventional diesel generators with cleaner generators, with fuel firstly from gas and then from biomass, and this process means that Bredenoord has aims that by 2012 over half of their capacity will be ‘clean’. At the same time capacity from hydrogen fuel cells will be increased, so by 2030 Bredenoord expects that half their fleet will be clean diesel and half fuel cells, ultimately all moving towards 100% sustainable conversion technique fuel cells.
 
With the fuel cell power units Bredenoord, provides the most innovative ‘genset’ for the future. These gensets still have a very limited capacity and the costs of both the hardware (parts) and the hydrogen is still very high. This makes these applications well suited for demonstrations and exhibitions, but is currently not a real useful alternative for the diesel generator.
 
The application of Clear Air gensets, or in combination with the GTL diesel, are ideally suited for use in locations where there is a real commitment to care for the environment. These innovations by Bredenoord ensure that their customers feel comfortable in saying that they use the best possible, practicable and reliable temporary energy!
   

Bredenoord, together with partners such as Nedstack, is the first company to deploy hydrogen fuel cell technique for mobile energy generators. On the 15 August 2010 in the Netherlands  an entire floating stage at Lowlands Festival was  supplied by sustainable energy. The Llowlab-islands obtain their full energy supply from the hydrogen generator Purity and for this festival Bredenoord, together with its partners, developed a second Purity, that has over three times as much capacity as the earlier model. Alredy in Germany, Denmark and Great Britain there is a demand for sustainable energy during events and Earlier this Summer, Bredenoord used its sustainable technique for part of the energy supply at the Glastonbury Festival and at three smaller festivals in the London environment.

The latest Purity model has a capacity of  17,5 kVA, more than sufficient to provide the entire Llowlab with energy. The smallest version of the Purity, with a capacity of 5kW, has been operational at Glastonbury 2010, with the specific task of functioning as a supplement for the solar power generators. Inside the extremely silent fuel cell generator an electro-chemical reaction takes place between hydrogen and oxygen from the air. This process only releases heat and clean water; so no emission of soot and particulate matter! This makes the Purity an important option for a sustainable future of events. 

Bredenoord is a family concern that has been involved in the rental, sales and production of mobile energy for over 70 years. In addition to the Purity line, the company has, amongst others, also developed the Clear Air, a filter that reduces soot emission by 99%,and complete biogas CHP’s (combined heat and power) .Thus the customer has the choice of mobile energy from different fuel types and with different types of emission. This Spring Bredenoord won the prestigious European Rental Award, thanks to its management and its innovating initiatives.  

www.bredenoord.com.

RECORD NUMBER OF EVENTS EARN THE GREENER FESTIVAL AWARD

Twenty three UK and European festivals have been awarded our prestigious Greener Festival Award 2010, joining the nine Australian Festivals who were named at the beginning of the year. A final list of recipients of the Award, including additional UK, European and North American winners will be made at the beginning of October after the festival season ends.

A record number of UK Festivals have joined the growing ranks of holders of the prestigious Greener Festival Award and the fourteen winners are the Isle of Wight Festival, The Big Session in Leicester, Wood Festival (Oxfordshire), Lounge on The Farm in Canterbury, Sonisphere at Knebworth, The Glastonbury Festival, Wireless Festival (Hyde Park), Splendour Festival (Nottingham), The Bristol Harbour Festival, The Sunrise Celebration, The City of London Festival, Standon Calling (Hertfordshire), The Summer Sundae Weekender (Leicester) and the Croissant Neuf Summer Party (Monmouthshire).

In addition the nine European mainland festivals are  SOS 4.8 (Spain), OpenAir St Gallen (Switzerland), The Oya Festival (Norway), Malmo Festivalen (Sweden), Grassroots (Jersey), Rock For People (Czech Republic), Open Air Festival (Czech Republic), Hadra Trance Festival (France) and Rototom Reggae Sunsplash (Spain). 

They join the nine Australian festivals who have already received the Greener Festival Award in 2010 - Bluesfest, The Falls Festival (on two sites) WOMADelaide, Southbound, Fairbridge, Island Vibe, Blues n Roots and Peats Ridge Festival.

All of the festivals have signed up to support environmentally good practices wherever possible and work with their audiences to reduce the festival’s carbon footprint, particularly from audience travel which often constitutes in excess of 70% of greenhouse gas emissions from rural sites. Festival organisers also have to complete a fifty three question assessment covering travel policies, CO2 emissions, waste and recycling policies, water use, noise pollution, environmental impact and green office policies. Festivals also have to undergo an independent environmental audit by an assessor sent by A Greener Festival. 

The final list of the 2010 Greener Festival Awards, which will include additional UK and US  festivals which have taken place in August and September, will be made at the beginning of October.

Ben Challis, co-founder of A Greener Festival said “We have had a record number of entries in 2010 and we are on track to make a record breaking 50 plus Awards this year (up from 37 festivals in 2009, 32 festivals in 2008 and 16 festivals in 2007 when the Awards scheme began). This is particularly impressive, not least because of the economic downturn but also because year on year we have raised the bar and made our Awards scheme more and more focussed on a meaningful and practical responses to climate change and pollution. We are also delighted that we have had more European and Australian festivals entering, new entrants in the UK and growing interest in the USA, and also that a number of festivals are entering into other schemes such as the 10:10 campaign as well as using established and proven tools from Julies Bicycle to measure and then reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

The UK Awards will be presented at the UK Festival Awards which will be held on Thursday November 18th at the O2 in London where the overall ‘Greenest Festival’ Award will be made. European Awards will hopefully be presented before the European Festival Awards scheduled for January 2011 in Groningen, Netherland, where winners from European festivals organisation Yourope’s parallel ‘Green n Scheme’  will also be acknowledged.

Having created an Award trophy out of recycled plastic bottles, CDs and remoulded Wellington Boots in 2009, this year’s award is made out of a recycled wine bottles specially re-labelled by the Award organisers. The Awards scheme is very generously sponsored by specialist music industry insurance brokers Robertson Taylor.

Sun, Sweat & Charity – a Glastonbury Tale

Here’s a link to the Community Channel’s new programme that looks at the charities and volunteers that are so important at the Glastonbury Festival  - and why the Festival is so important to them. Featuring WaterAid, Greenpeace, Oxfam, Shelter, The Festival’s world famous Green Police, the festival’s radio station Worthy FM, The White Ribbon Alliance, The National Trust, the on-site medical team – Billy Bragg and Michael Eavis! It shows just what a Festival can do to promote messages at an event – here a range of different charities promoting sustainability, safe child birth, access to water and climate change amongst others! 

http://www.youtube.com/v/ojgpgbJvZ38&hl=en_US&fs=1?rel=0

and http://www.communitychannel.org/content/view/3733/75/

Glastonbury cleans up

Many more fan’s at this years Glastonbury have taken tents and other camping quipment home with them, in a distinct improvement on 2009. Last year 5,572 tents were left behind and 2,220 camping chairs, 3,321 airbeds, 400 gazebos and a whopping 6,538 sleeping bags were left behind to go into landfill. Lucy, the Glastonbury Green Initiatives co-ordinator posted this on the official Glasters website

A big thank you to everyone who packed up all their camping equipment and took it home, and for putting all their rubbish into bin bags.  It made such a huge difference looking across the farm after the Festival and not seeing nearly as many abandoned tents, roll mats, sleeping bags, chairs etc. It still wasn’t perfect, but it was a LOT better than last year. Thanks to everyone for ‘TAKING IT HOME’ – and let’s work towards doing even better next year!”

But there was still masses of litter and mess on-site – I walked past the John Peel Stage and then onwards to the Pyraid Stage every morning and frankly it WAS Trash City – with unbelievable amounts of waste just discarded and left on the floor. For a interesting read, here is a link to Dave Wilson’s blog on Q107 http://www.q107.com/Blogs/UKClassicRock/BlogEntry.aspx?BlogEntryID=10123000 .

Our Great Big Green Ideas came up with some neat solutions to waste left at festivals, especially for tents, but the simple fact remains that if people re-use tents they are then not ‘waste’ at all – and don’t need to be either reclaimed, recycled or sent to landfill.

www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk and see the Guardian’s Blog at http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/green-living-blog/2010/jul/02/glastonbury-litter-reusable-cups-recycled-tents

LOVE THE FARM …. LEAVE NO TRACE

Glastonbury aims high with solar plan

The Times has reported on Michael Eavis’s plans to install 1,100 solar panels on the roofs of his cow barns at Worthy Farm, home of the legendary Glastonbury Festival, making it Britain’s biggest privately owned solar farm capable of generating 200 Kikowatts of power – enough to meet the electricity needs of 40 homes.  Michael told the Times “I’ve been planning this for a long time but the Gulf of Mexico oil spill has brought home just how urgent it is that we move to renewable energy”. The Festival already runs the weekend event (next weekend, June 25-27) on biodiesel generators but the new ‘feed in tariffs’  will allow Michael to sell the energy he generates to the National Greed - meaning that solar power is green, clean and economically attractive too.  The solar panels, covering 1500 sq metres of ‘Mootel’ roof, will cost £550,000 to install but could produce revenues of £45,000 per annum, as well as reducing the Farm’s electricty bill, and should take six years to recoup the outlay, and then Michael says he will reinvest profits into more solar generating capacity.

Festival Harvest line up announced

 

The line up and track listing for our brand new FESTIVAL HARVEST double CD is out. The new CD will be packed in 100% card to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and has been certified for the new IG Mark. The CD will be released as a limited edition double CD and as a download on June 1st. The bands are the BEST of British new talent – enjoy!

Festival Harvest

CD1

  1. ELLEN & THE ESCAPADES Without You
  2. CHANGING HORSES  Cut All Strings
  3. MIRRORS  Lights and Offerings
  4. SCOTT RABA  & THE ACE River Runs Dry
  5. HERELDEDUKE  Shudda
  6. THE MORNING ORCHESTRA  Whatever Goes Around 
  7. REBECCA MAYES   Don’t Lose Your Head
  8. FAMILY MACHINE  Got It Made 
  9. MY LUMINARIES   Parasol 
  10. TOM WILLIAMS & THE BOAT  Concentrate
  11. THE SHUTES  Satellite Gods
  12. THE SECRET CINEMA BAND  Official Neck For The Rope
  13. MAYHEW  Foxglove
  14. FADED CADENCE  The Valediction 

 

CD2

  1. FANGS  Cos I Said So 
  2. A BAND CALLED QUINN  Ghosts From The War
  3. THE BEAUS  Final Notice 
  4. LYKEZ Ft RAGGZ, D.TAIL & BITTER I Does Dis Ting 
  5. MOPP Ft Beth Hold On
  6. GOODBYE STEREO  Lightyears Away
  7. LIGHTGUIDES   Midget Gems
  8. TIGER SHADOW   Escape 
  9. WASHINGTON IRVING
  10. MONTAGE POPULAIRE  Sorrow’s Well Rehearsed (Demo)
  11. THE ORKID  Roads From Here
  12. WOODENBOX WITH A FISTFUL OF FIVERS  Twisted Mile
  13. YEARNER BABIES  Icarus
  14. THE MOLES  Neptune’s Beard

All of the bands were chosen by bookers and organisers at The City Showcase, The Glastonbury Festival, The Isle of Wight Festival, Kendal Calling, Solfest, T-in-the-Park, Music South West and Plugged in Yorkshire.

FESTIVAL HARVEST READY FOR GATHERING IN!

We are sooooo excited at the imminent launch of our new double album – Festival Harvest 2010, featuring the best of new talent in Britain in 2010. Whether it is the ethereal beauty of Faded Cadence, or the blues, folk – no, dammit – downright foot tapping country rock from Ellen & The Escapades, the Leeds band who are a firm favourite of Michael Eavis, or perhaps the psychedelic musings of the Moles , the bottled spring sunshine that is Brighton’s Morning Orchestra , or the strident rock and compelling, passionate tunes of Scott Raba & The Ace, or the weird and wonderful mix that is Cumbria finest, Hereldeduke (think Stevie Wonder meets Ian Brown), or the fabulous glorious pop from Goodbye Stereo from the Isle of Wight or the downright dirty take on London life from Lykez, this album is a breath of fresh air brought to you by some of Britain’s best festivals.

With recommendations from six fetsivals including T-in-the-Park, Glastonbury, Kendal Calling and the Isle of Wight we think we have a real winner.

The limited edition CD will be packaged in 100% card and will be available to download.

Watch this space for more news!

New Glastonbury recycling film online now

Reduce, reuse, recycle

If  you were walking in the countryside would you throw your rubbish on the floor or wait for a bin? Hmmm, some people at Glastonbury seem to think that the floor is just fine and dandy. Luckily there is a plan in place to clear up and recycle whatever the Festival can.

This short film by Joe Wheatley gives you an insight into the huge operation that takes place to keep the Glastonbury site clean during the Festival. Every can or plastic bottle that goes into the recycling bins gets sorted by hand, by our dedicated recycling team in the green barn close to Worthy Farm. The stars of this are the Litter Pickers, the villains the idle careless fans who just, well, seem to prefer to live in filth.

http://www.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk/news/glastonbury-recycling-film

Nurse Bell to the green theatre please!

For all of those who prefer their scones with butter and strawberry jam and cucumber sandwiches with the crusts cut off, then NURSE BELL are just your cup of tea – very English and great at breakfast.

And now the anarcho-funk-disco-folk-indie-politico rockers have announced plans to join the green revolution by adopting a number of carbon efficient touring policies in a bid to fight climate change. In a move to reduce the environmental impact of their gigs, the band,  the brainchild of young Dr West and “The Nurse of a Certain Age” have posted up new plans on their website saying that these include employing an ‘all green’ staff policy for the tour - all roadies will have to have green face paint and green clothing and “will look like leprechauns” and that “all vehicles to be used (quite a few) will be painted green with the words ‘we have gone green’ painted on the side. All stages will be decorated green and the band will be reading green(ish) newspapers on their tour bus. Nurse Bell told this Blog  “See – we are doing our bit to save the planet!”. They also advise fans to log onto www.petrolheadsRus.com for details of energy saving ideas – the top tip today – “why not hire in servants with their own car to drive you to the pub so you don’t waste unnecessary energy – good eh!”.

The band have a number of important issues to promote including marmite and nudity (although not together) and have recently launched the online website www.dontbothertotypethisinitsahoax.com  for victims of clinically gullibility as well as a new single, Black Dr Martens, first released by Whitstable’s legendary punk band The Ignerents.

The band have now entered the 2010 Glastonbury Emerging Talent Competition (ETC) saying “We plans to gig a lot this year but Glasters would be the jewel in the crown. With all of the green stuff going on down in Somerset we could treat the whole shenanigan as one giant offset with absolutely no effort from us  – that’s a fab way to start the new year isn’t it? Now all we have to do is get selected for the finals and then win. Pyramid Stage, here we come!”

AGreenerFestival does not actively support offsetting except as a measure of last resort. As Dr West is prone to say ……. oooooooooooh Nurse Bell.

http://news.qthemusic.com/2010/01/win_a_gig_at_glastonbury.html

www.myspace.com/ohnursebell

Forest fires ring Athens as Greece declares state of emergency – and all around the world extreme weather tops the agenda.

fireThousands of Greeks were battling to save their homes from put of control forest fires which have now reached the edges of Athens, prompting the Greek government to declare a state of emergency and call on support from Italy, Cyprus and France. It is estimated that 120,000 hectares of forests have been destroyed as well as hundreds of homes. In the 2007 fires seventy people died. Elsewhere extreme climate change and human activity are being blamed for the severe drought in Northern China where five million people now face drinking water shortages – in a region stretching from the Jilin province in the North East to the grasslands of Inner Mongolia in the North. China’s livestock also face water shortages and 22 million acres of farmland have been damaged by the drought. The live music industry hasn’t escaped extreme weather either: Apart from the torrential rainstorms and floods which have blighted festivals like Glastonbury and Roskilde (most notably in 2007), one woman died and seventy were injured when a freak storm hit the Big Valley Jamboree Festival in Canada in August 2009 and in central Europe a severe storm with strong winds and torrential rain caused a large marquee at the Pohoda festival in Slovakia to collapse in July – killing one fan and injuring fifty more, some very seriously. Even the Benicassim festival in Spain suffered a temporary suspension when high winds on the 17th July meant that the Kings of Leon couldn’t play as conditions were too dangerous – with high winds affecting the main stage and destroying many camper’s tents

 

http://www.spectator.sk/articles/view/35996/2/one_person_dies_and_dozens_are_injured_at_pohoda_open_air_festival.html and http://www.ilmc.com/news/round_the_clock_news/freak_storm_death_at_canadian_festival_10.html

and http://www.nme.com/news/kings-of-leon/46190

First Greener Festival Awards for 2009 announced

Moo should try and leave no trace!

Moo should try and leave no trace!

Seven English festivals, one Scottish, one Italian, two American and five Australian events are the first recipients of the coveted 2009 Greener Festival Award, acknowledging the events’ efforts to reduce their environmental impact. In the UK, The Sunrise Celebration, Download, Firegathering, the Glastonbury Festival, Wireless, Hard Rock Calling and the Isle of Wight Festival all were praised for their green policies and on-site activities whilst in Scotland T-in-the-Park was congratulated for its innovative approach to water use and engaging with the audience to reduce the festival’s greenhouse gas emissions - the massive Rototom Reggae Sunsplash in Italy was similarly praised. In America, the Atlanta Jazz Festival and the 80,000 capacity Bonnaroo Festival were both praised  for coherent and effective environmental best practices whilst in Australia the fantastic five Festivals who received the award were Peats Ridge, The Falls Festival, Bluesfest, WomAdelaide and Southbound were all congratulated for their efforts. All the award winners in 2009 will receive a special trophy designed by sixth form student Sade Goddard from Keswick School in Cumbria whose competition winning design is constructed from recycled plastics made from crushed CDs, remoulded plastic water bottles and unwanted wellington boots. The recycled plastic boards made by Smile Plastics “combine a strong environmental message with an evocative and distinctive appeal linked to the processing of plastic waste.” 

The Greener Award is based on a 56 point checklist which covers green office policies, energy use and carbon reduction, travel and transport, support for green initiatives, waste management, recycling, water use and environmental protection and noise pollution and we have a team of environmental auditors who visit festivals to assess environmental good practice and effective green policies. The Award scheme is supported by Robertson Taylor, specialist insurance brokers for the music and entertainment industries. This is the third year of our awards scheme and it is clear that our participating event organisers are doing more and more to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, reduce waste and move towards a carbon neutral infrastructure. The key issue now is working with the audience to reduce travel emissions – which can sometimes make up almost three quarters of a festivals’ carbon footprints. Our auditors have noticed that more and more festivals are starting to work with the audience to promote sustainable lifestyles – the team that came back from the Isle of Wight raved about the really clever initiatives there. In the US the Bonnaroo Festival was praised for its innovative education programmes and both Glastonbury and T-in-the-Park both work hard to promote green issues – by adopting new and improved practices each and every year, and by working to publicise new initiatives. We are also delighted with the new Award trophy designed and made by students at Keswick School in Cumbria which combines an attractive design with recycled plastics, CDs and Wellington boots, thousands of pairs of which are sadly left behind at festivals.

Sing till you are blue in the face

Jarvis, you are bloooming marvellous

Jarvis, you are bloooming marvellous

In the week when the UK Climate Projections report was released, comes news from Oxfam about a new campaign on climate change. The Met Report on climate projections, based on 12 years of reserach, makes for some fairly horrific reading and suggests that London summer temperatures could regularly top 40C by 2080 and that the country will be ravaged by blistering summers, wild fires, storm surges and failed crops in the South and the environment in the North of the country damaged by severe and heavy rainfall.  The report is a welcome source of guidance for the health service, farmers and the emergency services on how they might need to respond to climate change in the future – and reminder to us all that we need to reduce carbon and other greenhouse gas emisisons now – and probably need to start to remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere as well.  The Oxfam Here & Now campaign, backed by pop stars like Jarvis Cocker, VV BRown, Fatboy Slim and the Kooks means that the stars will sport a bold new look – blue faces – as Oxfam campaigns over the next few months for a fairer climate deal. A video of the blue faced celebrities is available on the Observer website at http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/video/2009/jun/21/climate-change-celebrity and you can see some of the blue crew in person at this year’s Glastonbury Festival (26th to 28th June).

Great Big Green Ideas – the winners

GreatBigGreenIdeasThis year’s Great Big Green Ideas had a massive response – so special thanks to our friends at T-in-the-Park, Glastonbury, Lucy at the Big Issue and Steve and Dan at www.virtualfestivals.com for making this happen. We should also say a big thank you to the Brit Awards, Latitude, Leeds Festival, the Verve and the Futureheads for the lovely prizes. Finally a big green thank you to  Luke Westbury for all of his design work and support and to Catherine Langabeer from the music industry climate change group Julies Bicycle for acting as a judge alongside our own Claire O’Neill (Association of Independent Festivals) and our co-founder, music lawyer Ben Challis.

 

So what did you think? Well, perhaps unsurprisingly travel was the first big issue – and the second was discarded waste. In particular a lot of you commented on the waste involved in producing plastic water bottles and the number just thrown away, with suggestions ranging from banning plastic bottle altogether to providing refillable pouches to on-site water fountains. In particular thanks to Gill Baker, Rachel Hemsley, Karen and J Bowerman for some good thinking here. A lot of people (far too many to mention here) also suggested souvenier beer mugs to cut down on discarded plastic beer glasses – something a number of Festivals including Latitude and the Cambridge Folk Festival are already doing – and we hope these ideas spread to other events alongside deposits on beer glasses – which really does seem to be a great idea that cuts down on waste – and cigarette butt pouches and containers to cut down on litter.

 

Both Mike Rance and John O’Keefe came up with a number of very good ideas –and John’s included providing campers with clearly marked rubbish bags so they can separate their waste for recycling, putting solar panels on the roofs of stages (we like that a lot!), introducing sawdust toilets and a cycle loan scheme at festivals.

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Here’s a nice simple idea from Claire & Family who say that people could label up unwanted items they are leaving behind – which anyone can then take – and that everyone should “take one piece of rubbish that’s not yours home.” A facebook page or such like could be set up for the most obscure item of rubbish not belonging to you. Sounds like fun and picking up one piece of litter each and every day was something Dawn Adams suggested too.

 

Phil McMahon points out that lots of energy being produced at Glastonbury is being wasted and asks whether a festival use the heat or kinetic energy created – and says “how about a Glasto gym where the pedal power created on exercise bikes is used to create electricity”. Another unnamed entry said “Get people to jump up and down on trampolines that use the absorbed energy from the jumping to generate electricity for the stage – that way, the more excited the crowd is, the more the band can play.” Love It! And thanks to Neil Wilson who had some similar thoughts on human power, as did Marie Tetley and Holly Levett who said that she is “sure there will be some people willing to give a few minutes to have a peddle” to power on-site facilities.

 

Michael Peck had some great ideas on what to do with human waste ….. poopthermal energy seems like an interesting idea (!) and energy from human waste seems a very positive use of resources. Michael even suggested turning the waste ‘flow’ into hydro-electricity!

As said, travel was high on everyone’s agenda and Matt Sweeney suggested coach shuttle schemes running from larger cities and towns close and fairly close to festival sites (cities of course usually have rail and coach links) directly to site itself  – the shuttle coaches run directly to the festival site. For Glastonbury these could be coaches from “Exeter, Southampton and Bristol for instance (places that would deal with the traffic anyway) and fans could easily train or coach in from anywhere and then take a coach for the rest of the journey”. Matt says “the benefits of this is that Glastonbury and the surrounding towns have a lot less congestion and yet again there is less pollution from the 20 or so cars of which the coach would replace. To the majority of the people attending Glastonbury, this could prove quite inconvenient, due to the amount of luggage they need to transport from car to coach, however if people were given an option to either purchase a parking pass and drive straight into Glastonbury or get a free pass for using the coach for part of the journey, I can imagine that the people who generally have very little luggage would opt for this without hesitation”.

 

Both Chris Bell and Simon Thornton also supported shuttles with Simon saying “If Glastonbury were to supply a selection car parks only near major roads (none on site) and supplied shuttle buses like those from the train station the following should occur (a) reduced congestion near the site as only buses would be travelling there (b) less queues for those that still use cars as they will be directly onto roads that can handle high volumes of traffic (c) less cars in total as you still need to catch a bus you may as well get one from near your home (d) less junk left over as you can only take what you can carry in one run, not the multiple trips to and from your car and (e) a extra benefit is that more money would be spent on food/drink at the festival as less would be brought in” adding  “Some of the now empty car parking area could be used for expanding the bus stations”. Chris added that the Beach Break festival in Cornwall had already implemented a no parking / shuttle / pick up only policy. Sara Dalby suggested that people should be able to return car park vouchers before a festival and swap to public transport or even bikes – and could get money off public transport or even a special gift.

 

Stuart McFeat makes a very clever point when he says “I think there should be recycling points by every toilet facility. So many people head to the toilet queue with a drink in their hand and then ditch it when they get to the front, if there were recycling facilities right by the toilets, people would be more likely to put their can / bottle / paper cup in there”. Very true Stuart. And in that zone, Louise Baker wants solar powered showers which seems green and, of course, very clean..

 

Jessica Dendura points out that in our sometimes rainy summer ponchos are made out of plastics – derived from crude oil and using other fossil fuels for cracking and then polymerisation. And she says “they are not made from a renewable source, are not biodegradable, and the production of them is releasing CO2 (a greenhouse gas) from the fossil fuels into the atmosphere”. But Jessica adds that a new material called PHA (Polyhydroxyalkanoates) or Biopol could be the future saviour of festivals ponchos.  Biopol is a polymer, with much the same properties as polyethene, naturally produced from the fermentation of natural sugars by bacteria, which is made from renewable sources and more importantly completely biodegradable when exposed to microorganisms present in landfill sites and soil. It is stable in air, and wet conditions – so perfect for poncho making. “This seems to be a perfect material for the future of all truly green-festivals – after all why just stop at ponchos?  …Umbrellas …Packaging …Cutlery …Tents …”

 

Rob Burton males a very sensible point about thrown away clothing saying “my idea is have a huge collection of clothing to send to Africa and/or other deprived areas of the world that are in desperate need of clothing.” Adding that there is a scheme through Unicef that actually pays £300 per tonne of clothing, funded by the government. James Pritchard tackles wellies saying “not trying to jinx the summer festival season, but wellies are a festival must have. Many people buy wellies and throw them away at the end of the festival. Wellies are probably one of the easiest items to reuse because of there ease of washing and disinfecting. I propose wellie recycling points in each of the campsites/ car parks for people to deposit there used wellies at the end of the festival. The wellies can then be dunked in a large bath of disinfectant to kill any germs and left to dry. I also propose the distribution of a strong clothes peg to keep the wellies in pairs. The wellies could then be taken to the next festival and sold to people in need of wellies for a cheaper price saving peoples wallets and the environment in one go”.  Another comment on throw aways – what about tents? Katie Plant says that “A system should be set up to stop people abandoning their tents without packing them up. Too many of them end up in a land fill when they could be put to use in poorer countries. Nobody has the time to take down all of the tents people leave and I have read that they often get chucked into a land fill. Everyone bringing a tent into the festival should have to pay a £10 deposit (price of the average cheap tent). On their exit, upon showing the tent matching their ticket (must match colour and size on ticket), they receive their deposit back. If people leave their tents there, deposit is non refundable and therefore the deposit can go to either the cost of keeping staff on a bit longer to take down the tents (in order for them to go to a charity). Any surplus money can be given to the charity“. Rachel Wheeler thinks all leftover tents could be combined into one giant fabulous glorious ‘festival tent!  

 

 

We all loved this one – “No glossy band programmes – if there has to be print, only on recycled or at least recyclable paper using relatively eco friendly dyes and finishes”.Thank you Judith Allen and we also liked the idea of can crushers in campsite areas – Kelly Dudley notes that this is fun to do when you have a hangover!!

 

We also liked Will Bugler’s and Maggie Dobe’s ideas for energy measurement and benchmarking – showing a year on year reduction in energy use – something Julies Bicycle are already working on in the live music sector and how about a great big energy meter displaying a festival’s energy use – that would be fab! Maggie says “I would like to see a Festival Carbon Footprint Table on a per capita basis, to establish a baseline for an events emissions with a view to future reduction. Get as many festivals as possible to participate by ensuring them that it is a positive step. Many events carry out simple footprints already and comparing festivals would give the promoter and the festival goer an idea of how green their event is and how they could move forward.”

 

Marc Argent had a lovely idea (we don’t know if could work but what a vision) “Issue all tent owners with sustainable cotton ‘glow in the dark’ guy ropes. Capture the sun’s power in the day and utilizes it perfectly at night – this stops people from tripping over tent ropes when intoxicated and makes the site look beautiful – imagine Glastonbury’s huge cobweb of tent ropes glowing across the valley”.  Jennifer Deavall sent us a recipe for a banana face mask recipe – tasty –  and avoids sachets and chemicals – and Barry Bell had this to say “At large festivals, how about fencing off a small, exclusive, first-come, first-served ‘family’ camping area where your ticket price also includes either a few tree seeds or established saplings that kids could plant near their tent and look after during the time they spent there. You can even get tickets that are impregnated with seeds, so they could actually plant their ticket. They’d get the satisfaction of doing something worthwhile for the environment and it would also be an incentive to keep going to that festival year after year to see the trees they planted”, something Sarah Whittington and Marc Lupton supported too.

We will be sending all of the best ideas to all of our sponsors including T in the Park, Glastonbury and Festival Republic and a number of other festival organisers in the UK – there are really just too many good ideas to choose from but the winner of the goodie bag and this year’s GREAT BIG GREEN IDEAS competition is Matt Sweeny and the runner up (who also gets a goodie bag) is Michael Peck. Reduce the traffic and recycle waste – gotta be good!

Glastonbury expands it’s recycling plans

The Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury

The Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury

The organisers of Glastonbury Festival will be providing recycling facilities for more waste streams than ever this year, with a special collection point for spent batteries and broken electrical devices. The Festival, the largest in the UK with the annual attendance at Michael Eavis’s Worthy Farm now at 177,000 people has a long history of recycling and already recycles paper, plastics, cans, bottles and food waste over the site and this year will add waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) to the list of materials possible to recycle. It is envisaged that the bulk of the WEEE will be created by the festival itself, rather than those attending, but there will also be a collection point for batteries. Waste management company Midex will provide a safe storage cage for the collection of the WEEE which will be used for the gathering and safe movement of redundant equipment throughout the event. At the end of the Festival, the disused equipment will be transported to a sophisticated facility for processing, where it will be broken down into component parts and shredded in line with the Environment Agency’s requirements. The Festival has a long track record of trying to reduce its environmental impact, with previous measures including compost toilets and the distribution of biodegradable tent pegs manufactured from potato starch and has the message ‘Love The Farm – Leave No Trace’ – and festival organisers say that they want festivals goers to think responsibly when they are packing there things to come to Glastonbury, don’t bring items that will end up in Landfill, or that you won’t be able to take back home again. “Limit what you bring, and clean up behind you.” The festival commits to continuing its policy of reducing the percentage of waste that goes to landfill, by placing controls on what is bought on site by staff, contractors, sponsors and traders and by emphasis on their responsibility not to bring items that will end in landfill.50% of the rubbish is recycled. All cans, glass, paper, wood and organic waste are separated and recycled. 15, 000 bins around the site clearly identified for either wet and dry recyclable materials or non-recyclable rubbish. In 2008 the festival recycled 105 tonnes of composted organic waste, 725 tonnes of chipped wood, 80 tonnes of hardcore, 15 tonnes of glass, 48 tonnes of cans and plastic bottles, 25 tonnes of cardboard, 20 tonnes of scrap metal, 20 tonnes of clothing, tents, sleeping bags. 1150 tonnes of waste was recycled.

www.glastonburyfestivals.so.uk