I don't know how many of you have been to Whole Foods lately, but if you get anything from the salad bar or the hot bar, you'll notice that all the containers and cutlery are either recyclable or biodegradable. It's part of a burgeoning trend to produce "zero waste."
Zero waste used to be an ultra-liberal concept - I remember a few years ago when my aunt spoke admiringly of a couple she knew that sent only one bag of trash to the landfill per year. I couldn't even imagine it.
Nowadays, however, the idea of zero waste is becoming more and more common as landfill permits become more difficult to procure, as places to dump become scarcer, and as we realize the detrimental methane-producing effects of throwing all our trash into the landfill.
Why are landfills going the way of the dinosaur? Simple. Do you want to live next to a landfill? Neither does anyone else. We are simply running out of space to dump our trash. Did you know that every American, on average, discards 4.6 pounds of waste per day? It's much better if we can recycle it, rather than leave it to take up space for thousands of years.
1. Sorting is a hassle. People will sometimes inadvertently throw biodegradable items into the recycling bin, which then gets heated up at the recycling center, only to melt and gum up the machines. We either need to be better educated in how to properly dispose of our waste, or we need smart machines that can do the sorting for us.
2. Composting is a tough sell. People are worried that it's stinky, that it will attract pests, and that it's simply just more work than tossing that apple core into the trash and never thinking about it again. But it's a worthwhile effort, because that nutrition gets returned to the soil, rather than being smothered in the landfill, only to produce methane, a gas that contributes to global warming. The key to happy composting is, again, education.
So how about you? Are you close to achieving zero waste, or do you still have a long way to go? Hit me up in the comments section below!
Overall, we still have a long way to go. My family recycles plastic, glass, aluminum, paper, and composts, but still we throw out one or two bags each week (unless it is a rare week where we only have one). My family is strange: they are a mixture between environmental idealist and carefree consumer.
In Germany you have to PAY for your garbage to be picked up based on how much it weighs... so people actually have an incentive to compost and recycle.
Very cool post. One thing too that sucks about landfills is that waste decomposed and actually produces toxic chemicals...even something as harmless as a ream of white paper has lots of chemicals that seep into the ground when dumped into a landfill.
While I recycle, i've never attempted a compost. I live in a tiny apartment with a boy and a dog that is prone to roaches, and somehow to me that seems like a huge obstacle, and that composting may be something of a house thing. But thats probably not the case. Anybody out there have tips for compost in a tiny apt???
Great post, Drenne! It's a long road to becoming zero waste, but it's great that more people are thinking about it and trying to get there.
Oakley, I am just starting to get into composting. I was always wary of it for exactly those reasons (space, smell and bugs), but we have a little patio in our new place and I know people who have made it work with even less space. Basically, we keep a small canister on the counter where we dump coffee grinds and vegetable peels and all that while we're cooking, then every few days, we dump it in the big outside bin, along with paper shavings and cardboard and stuff.
We made a worm bin out of those huge Rubbermaid bins (http://whatcom.wsu.edu/ag/compost/Easywormbin.htm), and it's actually pretty awesome. The worms cut down on the smell (it only smells when you turn the compost, a chore I tend to hand off) and help everything decompose faster. We just started it this summer and we already have a ton of really awesome soil to add to our little herb/veggie garden.