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New Yorkers already have blue and green bins for recycling glass, metal, paper and plastic. But now brown bins for organic waste are starting to appear all over the city. These plastic totems are part of the city’s multimillion-dollar campaign to cut down on greenhouse gas emissions and reliance on landfills, and to turn food scraps and yard waste into compost and, soon, clean energy.
In the 19th century, the city had a simple method for dealing with organic rubbish: It enlisted scavenging swine to nose through the gutters for leftovers. Now, the city is employing the primal chemistry of decay.
About 14 million tons of waste are thrown out each year. It costs the city almost $400 million annually just to ship what it collects
from homes, schools and government buildings (by rail, barge or truck)
to incinerators or landfills as far away as South Carolina. (In
addition, dozens of private companies put trucks on the road to take away refuse from office buildings and businesses.)
The largest single portion of the trash heap is organics, or things that were once living. That apple core, that untouched macaroni salad, that slice of pizza and the greasy paper plate it was served on are heavy with moisture, which makes shipping expensive. As they decompose, they release methane, a greenhouse gas.
Former Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg declared food waste the “final recycling frontier” when his administration began its ambitious curbside program in 2013 as the linchpin of the city’s sustainability goals.
That effort has continued under Mayor Bill de Blasio, and the project is on the verge of an expansion that could change how all New Yorkers deal with refuse, and test the city’s ability to manage organic materials on a scale never seen in the United States.
Smaller cities like Portland, Ore.; San Francisco; and Seattle all have mandatory programs. But the population of those three places combined is smaller than Brooklyn or Queens alone.
New York’s residential organics collection program is already the largest in the country: More than a million residents in parts of all five boroughs have curbside service. By the end of next year, officials say, all city residents will have a way to recycle their food scraps and other leaf and yard waste.
On her first day as sanitation commissioner, in 2014, Kathryn Garcia said that she wanted her agency to lead the nation in organics recycling. While businesses are gearing up to use machinery and technologies that will turn food waste into new products, the department has to make sure there are enough facilities (and willing neighbors) to accommodate and sort tens of thousands of tons of putrescible materials.
So how will it work?
Picking Up
New York’s dense, vertical landscape makes collection a labyrinthine endeavor. Creating all-new routes just to fetch organics would be expensive
and snarl traffic. The city is finding ways to modify existing routes,
using trucks with separate compartments for trash and organics.
“Without the citizenry of New York, I don’t think our team could have gotten our program off the ground,” said Ron Gonen, the city’s deputy commissioner of recycling and sustainability during the Bloomberg administration.
To
persuade skeptical city officials that New Yorkers would participate,
he pointed to the tens of thousands of people already hauling leftovers
to collection points in vacant lots, community gardens and farmers’
markets, set up by pioneering composters and groups like the Lower East Side Ecology Center.
In 2013, the city began handing out countertop buckets and large outdoor rolling bins made with thick, chew-resistant plastic and raccoon-proof lids to about 3,000 households on Staten Island.
Last
year, about 23,000 tons of orange peels, apple cores and other organic
materials were collected from about 300,000 households, 722 schools,
agencies and institutions and 80 drop-off points, according to the city.
That means about 2 percent of the organic waste collected by the city
was diverted from landfills.
The
program was adopted in neighborhoods like Park Slope, Brooklyn, with
little resistance. But wooing the managers of tall buildings hasn’t been
as easy. The trash rooms of large buildings require reorganization and
new routines to accommodate organics collection. Porters must carry
extra bins to the curb. So far, 774 apartment buildings have signed up, a
small fraction of the city’s high-rises.
Stuyvesant
Town-Peter Cooper Village, the 110-building complex on the East Side of
Manhattan that is home to 27,000 people, has signed on. Its management company
leveraged the enthusiasm of committed composters and campaigned
residents with text messages and emails emphasizing that pest activity
would not increase.
Not everyone will have trucks pick up their food scraps or dead leaves at the curbside by the end of next year, especially those in densely populated neighborhoods of Manhattan and the Bronx, unless their building owners apply for the program. To reach those sections, the city is expanding the number of drop-off sites, especially in high-traffic areas near subway stations. It is also experimenting with bin-sharing programs and partnerships with libraries and local businesses willing to adopt containers.
Making Compost
The composting process
employs billions of microorganisms to break down organics into the
essential component of soil called humus. Grass clippings, food scraps
and coffee grounds (“greens”) are mixed with dry leaves or branches
(“browns”), spread into piles and churned by hand or machine to promote
decay. It can take six to nine months for the materials to decompose
completely. Compost is known to farmers as “black gold” because it helps
plants take root and prevents soil erosion.
The earth has been recycling organics for billions of years. But according to Jean Bonhotal, the director of the Cornell Waste Management Institute, humans have interrupted that circular system by entombing valuable nutrients in landfills and relying on chemical fertilizers.
“Our soils, really, in the whole world, are pretty trashed,” Ms. Bonhotal said.
Paradoxically, for nature to retake its course, human intervention is
required. After organics are tossed in the back of a city truck, they
are driven to a waste transfer station operated by a private company.
(Staten Island’s scraps are taken directly to a composting site in Fresh
Kills.) The compostables, which often arrive in plastic bags, are then
separated from contaminants before being transported to a composting
site or an anaerobic digestion facility, ideally no more than 100 miles
away.
Robert Buffolino, the general manager at American Recycling Management,
one of six companies paid by the city to manage the bulk of the
compostables, has seen all manner of inorganic material come through:
pencils, water bottles, phones, even a computer. Schools especially, he
said, need to educate their students about what goes in the bin.
“They still have some work to do with that,” he said.
Even utensils and plates marketed as “biodegradable” don’t always break
down as advertised. Instead of using fingers and rakes to remove
unwanted materials, the city now uses expensive machines to pulverize
the material and separate plastics with paddles and centrifuges.
Composting facilities may reject a whole truckload if it isn’t clean
enough, sending it to a landfill. There is also the critical question of
whether there are enough facilities to process the waste, clean or not.
“There’s definitely enough capacity for what’s collected now,” Ms. Garcia, the sanitation commissioner, said.
“The
challenge is moving the program rapidly, but not overwhelming the
processing capacity in the region,” she added. “The state does not have
unlimited capacity yet.”
The city has only two composting sites that can handle food waste. One is at the jail complex on Rikers Island, and the other is in Fresh Kills, what used to be city’s largest dumping ground.
The majority of the city’s organics will be sent to private facilities in the region. Hauling companies pay composting sites a so-called tipping fee to take in and process materials. For now, about 10 facilities take in the city’s scraps, and the Sanitation Department is meeting with other sites that could assist in the coming year.
Finding enough land far enough from neighbors but close enough to the city is one challenge. And many private composting sites are accustomed to processing farm waste like rotting vegetables, which is somewhat different from handling the Chinese takeout and fettuccine Alfredo that city dwellers toss.
The State Department of Environmental Conservation, which regulates organic recycling facilities, said that by the end of the year, new regulations would allow existing facilities to take in more food scraps.
While the government is counting on private industry to build and operate the processing infrastructure, businesses are reluctant to go into debt without an assured flow of material, said Brian Fleury, a vice president of WeCare Organics, which manages the city’s Staten Island composting site.
“They can’t guarantee a voluntary program,” Mr. Fleury said.
McEnroe Organic Farm
in the Hudson Valley, about 100 miles north of the city, is the largest
recipient of the city’s feedstock. More than half of the approximately
16,000 cubic yards of finished compost it makes a year is reused on its
own crop beds, and the rest is sold for about $48 per cubic yard to
farmers and home gardening stores on the East Coast.
The challenges ahead are similar to the ones that recyclers of metals, glass and plastic have confronted over the past three decades: Will residents properly sort their food scraps? Can processors sufficiently clean up what is collected? And will compost be treated as a valuable commodity?
Making Biogas
Like the human stomach, anaerobic digestion facilities use microbes to break down organics into biogas,
which is primarily methane and carbon dioxide. The same way humans chew
to accelerate digestion, machines grind organics into a slurry the
consistency of a milkshake, which is fed into a large, airtight tank
heated to about 100 degrees, called a digester. What comes out are
biogas and a mix of water and solids. The biogas must be refined before
it can be put into a utility’s natural gas pipeline, or used as fuel for
trucks and buses. It can also be converted to electricity and heat to
power homes and businesses.
It might sound like Doc Brown’s harebrained scheme to power his DeLorean time machine in “Back to the Future,” but using leftovers to create energy is now commonplace in Europe. And cities across the United States are following suit, including New York.
Brian Paganini, a vice president of Quantum Biopower, which recently opened a $14 million facility in Southington, Conn., said anaerobic digestion was “the next revolution in recycling.”
Quantum is one of several companies looking at the city’s feedstock.
One upside is that digesters occupy a much smaller footprint than composting fields. But the initial capital costs are much greater. The remaining solids must also be processed or discarded. And like human stomachs, digesters can get upset. It can take several months to calibrate the mix of microorganisms that will break down organics.
“You can’t feed a baby French fries on Day 1,” Mr. Paganini said.
Instead of relying on private developers to build new facilities for the digesters, cities are adapting existing infrastructure: wastewater treatment facilities.
In a testing program that began in 2012, the city is adding commercial
food waste to some of the tanks at the Newtown Creek Wastewater
Treatment Plant in Brooklyn, to generate higher levels of methane gas, a
byproduct of wastewater treatment.
Since
the pilot began, the plant’s biogas production has increased by as much
as 17 percent, according to the city’s Department of Environmental
Protection.
For now, most of that biogas is simply burned off, or flared, though some helps heat the plant’s boilers, said Pam Elardo, a deputy commissioner for the department. (While wasteful, excess methane must be flared for safety reasons and to reduce fugitive methane, a greenhouse gas.)
To create usable methane, the utility National Grid
plans to build a $30 million system for the plant, which will
essentially squeeze out water vapor and carbon dioxide, as well as
filter out chemicals and conditioners flushed into the sewer system.
A small group of National Grid customers could be warming their homes with gas made from the plant by the first cold day near the end of next year, the company said.
For now, only a small portion of the city’s food waste is converted into biogas. But there may come a day when sanitation vehicles pick up our leftovers, drive to one of the city’s 14 wastewater treatment plants, process the organics for digestion, then drive a few yards to refuel with compressed gas.
“It
would save the city millions of dollars annually,” Mr. Gonen, the
former deputy sanitation commissioner, said. “In addition, from a
resiliency standpoint, it’s an opportunity to cleanly generate a portion
of the city’s fuel and energy needs.”
Mr. Gonen, who now runs an investment fund called Closed Loop Partners, estimates that when the city’s program scales up, anaerobic digestion will cost around $35 to $50 per ton, which is more than composting but about half the average price of burying a ton of city waste in landfills.
What’s Next?
In
the year ahead, the department has earmarked $27.7 million to
distribute new bins, educate residents and pick up and transport
materials.
“Organics
processing is not free,” Ms. Garcia said. But when looking at long-term
costs to transport and bury trash, she said, “we think this is a much
better model.”
One of the most expensive pieces is collection: Each truck must have two workers, no matter how many pounds of organics it carries. Increasing residential participation, which is still relatively low, will be critical to making the overall system more cost-efficient.
One way to do that is to make the program compulsory. The city’s metals, glass and plastic recycling program was mandatory when it was rolled out in 1989. Ms. Garcia intends to keep this program voluntary until more New Yorkers are involved.
The city is also focusing on the commercial sector. So far, about 300 establishments including restaurants, food manufacturers, hotels and stadiums are now required by law to separate organics. More will be added as processing capacity increases.
Other states, like Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Vermont, are phasing in bans on the burial of organics in landfills, beginning with the refuse of large businesses. (Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo proposed similar legislation, which stalled in the New York Legislature.)
In addition to political momentum, social forces could drive the program. Thanks to national campaigns focused on food waste prevention by nonprofits like ReFED and the Natural Resources Defense Council, people today are increasingly conscious about how their food is grown, and where it ends up. About 40 percent of all of food produced in the United States ends up in the garbage, according to a study by ReFED.
“I’m extremely optimistic about where this program is going,” Ms. Garcia said. Still, she said, “We have a lot to learn.”
Q. and A.
What Counts as Compostable?
The motto is, “If it grows, it goes.” The Sanitation Department’s guide has a few tips for what to include.
Some neighborhood drop-off sites that process food scraps may not take
meat or dairy because they don’t break down as readily and can attract
rats.
What Do I Do if I Have a Tiny Kitchen?
The
city has a small plastic caddy for your countertop, but you can put
scraps in any lidded container or bag and store it in the freezer.
When Will I Receive a Brown Bin?
Check the department’s website to find out when your neighborhood will get service.
You may not automatically receive a bin if you live in a large
building, or above a store. Buildings with 10 or more units, nonprofits
and residences along commercial strips can apply for service. To keep bins clean, the city recommends using compostable liners. If stolen or damaged, the city will replace or repair them.
Will I Be Fined if I Do It Wrong?
Not
yet. For now, the program is voluntary for residents. “We’re not
serving enough of the population to require some and not all New Yorkers
do this,” Ms. Garcia said.
Will This Create a Rat Infestation?
The
bottom of the bin is actually a few inches off the ground (out of the
smell range of rats) and designed to discourage burrowing animals.
Because they’re made of thick plastic, it’s more likely that rodents
would chew through a trash bag sitting on the curb, said Andrew Hoyles,
who manages the city’s outreach teams.
Where Can I Drop Off My Food Scraps?
You can drop off scraps at about 100 sites run by the city, or one of its partner organizations like GrowNYC or The Compost Project. There are more than 200 community operations that will also process food scraps or yard waste locally.
Where Can I Buy Compost?
The city plans to hold several events to give away compost. But you can go to nyc.gov/getcompost to make a request. You can also buy locally produced compost from several community composting groups, like the Lower East Side Ecology Center or Big Reuse.
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