Manure, slurry and food could be used to create enough  energy to heat and power more than two million homes in Britain, the Government  will claim.
 The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs  (Defra) is launching a task force to help sectors including farming and the  water industry meet goals to produce energy from anaerobic digestion, which  generates gas from the break down of organic material without  oxygen.
 According to Defra, the UK produces more than 100  million tonnes of organic material per year that could be used to produce  biogas, 90 million tonnes of which comes from manure and slurry.
 Speaking at the NFU conference in Birmingham today,  Farming and Environment Minister Jane Kennedy is expected to say: "We're  producing more organic waste in this country than we can handle, over 12 million  tonnes of food waste a year - and farmers know too well the challenges of  managing manure and slurry.
 "There are alternatives to sending organic waste to  landfill. Anaerobic digestion is a true solution."
 "This material could produce enough heat and power to  run more than two million homes - helping to prevent dangerous climate change by  providing a renewable energy source as well as reducing our reliance on  landfill.
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