I was reviewing Albany’s 2017 Active Landfill Annual Report and noticed that the City dramatically reduced the amount of asbestos-contaminated waste that they were taking at the landfill mid-year. Does anybody know why?
Solid Waste
California leads 7 states in intent to sue EPA over landfill emissions rule
France bans plastic cups, plates and cutlery
$180bn investment in plastic factories feeds global packaging binge
"The global plastic binge which is already causing widespread damage to oceans, habitats and food chains, is set to increase dramatically over the next 10 years after multibillion dollar investments in a new generation of plastics plants in the US."
"Fossil fuel companies are among those who have ploughed more than $180bn since 2010 into new βcrackingβ facilities that will produce the raw material for everyday plastics from packaging to bottles, trays and cartons."
What I learned during my summer as a garbage man
Hefty EnergyBag ends yearlong recycling pilot in Omaha; program remains controversial despite saving 10 tons of materials from landfills
"It works like this: People in the Omaha area buy orange Hefty-brand bags from local Hy-Vee stores or from online vendors. They then fill the bags with stuff thatβs not otherwise recyclable, like foam cups, chip bags and plastic utensils. The bags go into recycling bins, and once they arrive at the City of Omahaβs contracted recycling sorting facility, theyβre picked off a conveyor belt and stockpiled for alternative uses. One such use is a fuel source at a Kansas City-area cement kiln."
"Dawaune Lamont Hayes, 23, of Omaha has spent the better part of this year stuffing the orange bags with such plastics. Hayes, who is communications director for a local art gallery, says he fills one up about every two months."
βI know that I have an option not to throw it into a landfill,β Hayes said.
"Sounds simple, right? But along the way, the program has also found vociferous criticism."
"On one side, program advocates say finding alternative uses for these materials is an improvement over sending them to rot in a landfill."
"On the other, local and national sustainability advocates have blasted the program. They say if weβre going to continue to use such materials as theyβre currently made β think the multilayered potato chip bag β itβd be better to just let the stuff sit in a landfill. If that potato chip bag, for instance, is incinerated, as has been one use case with the program so far, it will emit carbon dioxide β exactly what environmentalists and many scientists say the Earth doesnβt need more of."