Food waste and compost

Last updated October 25, 2024

Fruit peels, food scraps, Kleenex, soiled pizza boxes, etc.: find out which materials should be put in your brown bin, get compost collection schedules and learn how compost is produced.

If your street has a compost collection, you must participate. Brown bin collection is mandatory. 

Using your brown bin is an important way to support our climate. You keep plant and animal matter from being landfilled with household waste, where it releases methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, as it decomposes.

What to put in your brown bin

If you can eat it, you can compost it. Some materials that have been soiled by food and water, such as cardboard or paper, also go into the brown bin. Take the time to check the list. Everything you compost makes a real difference.

Having a mini-bin in the kitchen or dining room is really helpful. Placing mini-bin elsewhere in your home, such as in the bathroom, will help you remember other compostable materials, like Kleenex.

Worried about bad smells and fruit flies? Find out ways to keep them at bay.

Do you want to master the art of composting? Sign up for our newsletter and get even more tips.

Put your brown bin out at the right time

Food waste collections take place once a week all year long for any building where brown bins have been provided.

Get a brown bin

If you do not have a brown bin or your bin is damaged, you can request a bin, have it repaired, or even have it replaced if it is not repairable.

Participate in the food waste or organic material collection

The difference between these 2 collections is due to the different operations at the 2 processing centres where your materials are sent.

In 15 boroughs, the food waste and green waste collections are separate.

In 4 other boroughs, there is a single organic waste collection that includes both green waste and food waste.

Contribute to producing quality compost

Thanks to your participation in the brown bin collection each week, the city produces its own compost. This nutrient-rich material improves the health of soil and plants.

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