Seattle now inspects garbage for food content.
Seattle government now going through citizens? trash for public shaming, revenue « Hot Air
Seattle government now going through citizens? trash for public shaming, revenue « Hot Air
Very little in KY, as well. Louisville has separate garbage and recycling bins for pickup, though and have a pretty good recycling program in place. The recycling center opened up in town and it's been mostly grass roots word of mouth that have people recycling much of anything. They have a recycling program at the university, but even that was student-driven, and it was in response to the recycling center opening up. The recycling center is part of the city sanitation department, though, so maybe we'll eventually have curb side recycling. We do currently have a kind ofcubside pickup service for recyclables, but it's just 2 Guys who come and pick it up and take it to the recycle centers (twice a month for $15 a month, or weekly for $25 a month).We are slowly being rehabilitated. In TN nothing gets recycled. Everything in one can. In Florida, we recycle everything. Cans, glass, newspaper, cardboard you name it.
It's not an either/or thing where it would be "better" to attack the problem at the retail and manufacturing level, because no matter how much they reduce the packaging, you're still gonna have packaging. And it makes more sense to recycle that packaging than it does to simply put it in a landfill. The packaging needs to be reduced, and it has been by a significant amount over the last 20 years. Other than the extremely annoying plastic clamshell packaging that still exists, more and more products are sold in "frustration-free" packaging, almost all of which can be recycled (or composted, like the wrapped candy wrappers). The plastic container for the bolts and screws? Recyclable.I question the footprint of recycling like layout does. Think this might have been talked about before? Would it not be better to attack our problem at the retail and manufacturing level? I certainly don't need the 4 bolts or screws I buy packaged in a plastic container big enough to holds my wallet. I don't need my candy wrapped in pieces of wrap when it all ready comes in a bag.. Etc etc.. I'm all for a better environment but now someone else is making money on my trash after I all ready bought it..
I'm not one you need to convince that we need to eliminate consumable plastics. I'm all for going back to milk and ketchup in glass bottles. Plastic, unless it's the specific compostable plastic, doesn't ever degrade in a landfill, because plastic only degrades with photodegradation, as in UV rays. I am not at all a fan of plastic for consumables.Seems to me just the footprint of manufacturing and transporting some of the clamshell packages you talk about, could greatly be reduced by going back to a renewable source like paper and trees, I know you remember that. Eliminate as much plastic and nearly eliminate the need to recycle a lot of it.
The reason it amazes you is, for lack of a less accurate euphemistic term, a certain level of scientific illiteracy in chemistry and microbiology. Scientific illiteracy is the bread and butter of magic.There was also this little nugget: "...huge methane emissions do to decomposition of landfill waste..." It amazes me that organic waste dumped in a landfill produces huge methane emission while the same organic waste trucked to a composite produces little or no methane emissions. It must be magic or green weenie license (poetic license) when it comes to science and facts.
Thank you Bill Nye.The reason it amazes you is, for lack of a less accurate euphemistic term, a certain level of scientific illiteracy in chemistry and microbiology. Scientific illiteracy is the bread and butter of magic.
When organic matter decomposes in a landfill it does so in four stages. Stage One is the aerobic stage, where aerobic bacteria (bacteria that live only in the presence of oxygen) consume oxygen while breaking down the long molecular chains of complex carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids that comprise organic waste. The primary byproducts of this process are carbon dioxide and nitrogen.
Stage Two is when the oxygen is depleted and the anaerobic bacteria (bacteria that lives in oxygen-free environments) converts the compounds created by aerobic bacteria into acetic, lactic, and formic acids and alcohols such as methanol and ethanol. As the acids mix with the moisture present in the land-fill, they cause certain nutrients to dissolve, making nitrogen and phosphorus available to the increasingly diverse species of bacteria in the landfill. The gaseous byproducts of these processes are carbon dioxide and hydrogen. If the landfill is disturbed or if oxygen is somehow introduced into the landfill, microbial processes will return to Stage One.
Stage Three decomposition starts when certain kinds of anaerobic bacteria consume the organic acids produced in Stage Two and form acetate, which is an organic acid which the methane producing bacteria consume to produce methane. This process causes the landfill to become a more neutral environment in which methane-producing bacteria begin to establish themselves. Methane-and acid-producing bacteria have a symbiotic relationship, each feeding off what the other produces.
Stage Four happens where things level out to where a constant amount of 60% methane and about 40% carbon dioxide is produced, usually for a period of 20 to 50 years.
With composting, the decomposition stage never reaches Stage Three. Before it gets to Stage Three, the compost is disturbed (turned over and agitated) which introduces oxygen into the mix, as well as by the introduction in many cases of living organisms like earthworms which naturally turn over the compost and introduce oxygen into the mix. If the compost pile is twice the size of a Pizza Hut or smaller, it doesn't even need to be turned over because it's small enough that oxygen will permeate the pile on its own. Thus, compost never reaches the methane gas producing stage of Stage Four. Large piles are closely monitored for methane with probe sensors to ensure they are aerated as soon as signs of methane production occur.
Stage One decomposition produces carbon dioxide, but the amount is less than a tenth of the methane produced in Stage Three and Four of a landfill, and methane is 72% more powerful than carbon dioxide in doing its greenhouse gas thing, so the carbon dioxide produced in composting is a small fraction of the greenhouse gasses produce by a landfill.
Thank you Bill Nye.
You're welcome, of course, but this is a good illustration of science illiteracy in America. Organic matter decomposition is some pretty basic microbiology and chemistry, and dare I say most Americans don't understand it and/or are not even aware of it. But that's not surprising considering 1 in 4 American adults think the sun revolves around the Earth, and of the 75% who know the Earth revolves around the sun, 47% of those don't know how long it takes to make one revolution around the sun. 50% cannot tell you which is bigger, an atom or an electron, and an even higher percentage cannot give you an accurate definition of molecule, cell or DNA.Thank you Bill Nye.