Winchester extends waste deal with Biffa until 2037
Winchester City Council has locked in an eight-year extension with waste giant Biffa, extending their partnership to 2037. The move aims to stabilize collections amid local government reforms, but critics warn future authorities may lose control over waste strategy.
Winchester City Council has approved an eight-year extension to its waste collection contract with Biffa Waste Services, pushing the deal’s end date to 2037. The initial 16-year contract, signed in 2021 with an eight-year break clause, had already delivered measurable gains, including a 13,000-mile reduction in truck routes annually and the successful rollout of food waste collections.
Council leader Martin Tod defended the extension, citing the contract’s track record under Liberal Democrat leadership since 2019. “Under the previous administration, recycling rates were falling and collections were unreliable,” Tod said. “Our partnership with Biffa has reversed that trend.” Cabinet member Steve Cramoysan highlighted operational improvements, including reorganized collection rounds that cut emissions and improved efficiency.
Key Points
- ✅ Contract extended to 2037 after initial 16-year deal with 8-year break clause
- ⚡ Food waste collections now citywide; truck miles reduced by 13,000 annually
- 💡 Critics question locking future authorities into current system ahead of local government reforms
Green councillor Danny Lee challenged the move, warning that merging authorities could inherit outdated contracts. “Why bind a future council to arrangements designed before reforms even take effect?” he asked, pointing to Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council, which maintains three separate waste contracts despite a 2019 merger.
| Factor | Current Council View | Reform Opponents |
|---|---|---|
| Contract Duration | Stability through 2037 | Risk of outdated system post-reform |
| Waste Infrastructure | Biffa partnership delivers efficiency | County Council’s slow investment pace a bottleneck |
| Future Control | Contract aligns with phased reforms | New authority could be locked into existing model |
Campbell Williams, the council’s environmental services lead, dismissed concerns about flexibility. “We assessed the market and Biffa remains the best value option,” Williams said. “The contract includes provisions to adapt to structural changes.” Yet critics argue the extension sidelines long-term planning in favor of short-term operational gains.
💡 Pro Tip
Local authorities extending long-term contracts ahead of structural reforms should negotiate clauses allowing early termination if governance changes materially.
Hampshire County Council’s delayed investment in regional waste facilities was cited by councillors as the single biggest obstacle to further progress. “Without county-level infrastructure, even the best-run city collection service hits a ceiling,” Cramoysan said. The council now plans to push for accelerated investment to support its recycling targets.
📋 By The Numbers
- 13,000 miles — Annual reduction in truck routes since contract began
- 2019 — Year Liberal Democrats took control, reversing declining recycling trends
- 3 — Separate waste contracts still active in Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole despite 2019 merger
The contract extension arrives as Hampshire prepares for a major local government overhaul, set to merge Winchester with neighboring districts by 2025. Supporters argue the continuity will ease the transition, while skeptics fear it will limit the new authority’s ability to design its own waste strategy from the ground up.