The busiest foodbank in the east of England has warned people's lives are at risk if the UK heads into a cold winter and the cost of living continues to rise.

Colchester Foodbank chief officer Michael Beckett said supplies are being used up faster than they are being donated and it could struggle to keep up with demand.

Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, he said the foodbank is currently the busiest it has ever been but donations are decreasing by 11 per cent every month.

Mr Beckett said: “There’s a real risk of people dying when it comes to next winter.

"In the summer if it’s a choice between heating and eating you can just turn the heating off and you might get a little bit cold at night I suppose but you might be okay.

“But if we have a cold winter, that’s my biggest fear this year that we have a cold winter this winter.”

Open across ten locations in the borough, the foodbank previously expected to be providing meals for as many as 30,000 people this year according to an earlier statement.

Mr Beckett said: “There was a blip in 2020 when the first lockdown happened where we got very busy, but then we beat that by December in 2021 and again in 2022. This year is looking like another record-breaking year.”

He added: “The cost of living crisis is such that we are likely only to get busier and we are particularly concerned about next winter, because of supply. 

“Demand is higher than supply at the moment, so we are burning through what we’ve got and obviously we’re concerned about winter.”

The war in Ukraine has also affected the number of items being donated in addition to the cost of living, with the public’s attention split between the crises.

The foodbank has received funding from the Trussell Trust which will allow it to recruit more staff and increase its efficiency.

Most of the people behind the scenes at the foodbank are volunteers and most of its money comes from the general public.