Current:Home > ContactCalifornia is forging ahead with food waste recycling. But is it too much, too fast? -Aspire Capital Guides
California is forging ahead with food waste recycling. But is it too much, too fast?
View
Date:2025-04-16 03:59:07
CHULA VISTA, Calif. (AP) — Two years after California launched an effort to keep organic waste out of landfills, the state is so far behind on getting food recycling programs up and running that it’s widely accepted next year’s ambitious waste-reduction targets won’t be met.
Over time, food scraps and other organic materials like yard waste emit methane, a gas more potent and damaging in the short-term than carbon emissions from fossil fuels. California’s goal is to keep that waste from piling up in landfills, instead turning it into compost or biogas.
Everything from banana peels and used coffee grounds to yard waste and soiled paper products like pizza boxes counts as organic waste. Households and businesses are now supposed to sort that material into a different bin.
But it has been hard to change people’s behavior in such a short period of time and cities were delayed setting up contracts to haul organic waste due to the pandemic. In Southern California, the nation’s largest facility to convert food waste into biogas has filed for bankruptcy because it’s not getting enough of the organic material.
“We’re way behind on implementation,” said Coby Skye, the recently retired deputy director for environmental services at Los Angeles County Public Works. “In America, for better or worse, we want convenience, and it’s very difficult to spend a lot of time and effort educating people about separation.”
Meanwhile, some communities that ramped up collection now have more compost than they know what to do with, a sign that more challenges are yet to come as the nation’s most populous state plows ahead with its recycling plans.
Only a handful of states mandate organics recycling, and none are running a program as large as California’s, which seeks to slash by 75% the amount of organic waste it sends to landfills by 2025 from 2014 levels.
Reaching that goal within a year would be a stretch, experts said.
About three-quarters of communities are currently collecting organic waste from homes, said Rachel Machi Wagoner, CalRecycle’s director. While some places are lagging, her aim isn’t to punish them but to help them get started, adding that every bit helps the state move towards its goal of reducing emissions.
“My goal is about figuring out where the challenges are and getting us as quickly as possible to success,” she said.
“I don’t know when we will reach our 75% goal, but we will reach it,” she added.
CalRecycle hasn’t tallied data yet on how much organic waste was diverted from landfills in 2023. Jurisdictions reported diverting 11.2 million tons (10.1 million metric tons) of organics at the end of 2022, up from 9.9 million tons (8.9 million metric tons) the prior year, Wagoner said.
Some challenges include getting residents on board with sorting their trash into a third bin and knowing what goes where. Others concern what to do with the nutrient-rich compost once it’s been created from collected grass clippings, tree branches and food scraps.
At Otay Landfill near the Mexican border, workers pick through heaps of branches and leaves to pull out plastic bits before the material is placed under tarps. The site processes 200 tons (181 metric tons) of organic waste daily and hopes to double that amount as more cities ramp up collection, said Gabe Gonzales, the landfill’s operations manager.
Once the compost is made, California’s law requires cities to use much of it. But many say they don’t have enough space to lay it all out.
Chula Vista, a San Diego County city of 275,000 people, is supposed to use 14,000 tons (12,700 metric tons) of compost a year but uses a few thousand at best, said Manuel Medrano, the city’s environmental services manager. Some is doled out in free compost giveaways for residents, while heaps of the material are stored in a fenced area of a local park.
“To transport it is really expensive, to spread it is really expensive,” Medrano said. “We’re nowhere near meeting that requirement.”
Communities with more open space might fare better. Cody Cain, head of marketing and sales for compost-maker Agromin, said his company has developed a plan to link cities struggling to meet these requirements with farmers who need the material for their soil.
“We basically are matchmakers. Call us the ‘Tinder’ of compost, and we’ll bring the farmer together with the city,” Cain said.
Food waste also can be converted into biogas to fuel vehicles or industrial operations. But a massive facility built three years ago in the Southern California city of Rialto now finds itself facing bankruptcy after Los Angeles was slow to ramp up collection, leaving the plant with insufficient waste, said Yaniv Scherson, chief operating officer for Anaergia Inc.
“It’s because the cities didn’t enforce on time the market is struggling,” he said. “If it doesn’t get feedstock this year, there is a chance it shuts down completely.”
LA Sanitation & Environment, which handles trash and recycling for the city of nearly 4 million people, had no immediate comment.
Heidi Sanborn, founding director of the environmental National Stewardship Action Council, said she supports the state’s law but wants more done to keep plastics out of compost and to develop alternative energy solutions. Some of California’s challenges stem from the fact the state is trying to build a system on a scale the country hasn’t seen, she said.
“We’re trying to fix incredibly tough problems. We’re not going to find the perfect solution out of the gate,” she said.
But, Sanborn added, “we’re on our way.”
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Chicago father convicted of attempted murder in shootings to avenge 2015 slaying of 9-year-old son
- As rainforests worldwide disappear, burn and degrade, a summit to protect them opens in Brazzaville
- US Mint announces five women completing fourth round of Quarters Program in 2025
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- RHOBH: Kyle Richards & Mauricio Umansky Have Tense Confrontation About Control Prior to Separation
- A list of mass killings in the United States since January
- American man indicted on murder charges over an attack on 2 US tourists near a German castle
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Millie Bobby Brown Embraces Her Acne Breakouts With Makeup-Free Selfie
Ranking
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- Student dies after drinking 'charged lemonade,' lawsuit says. Can caffeine kill you?
- Dusty Baker tells newspaper he is retiring as manager of the Houston Astros
- After backlash, Scholastic says it will stop separating diverse books at school book fairs
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Acapulco residents are left in flooded and windblown chaos with hurricane’s toll still unknown
- Horoscopes Today, October 25, 2023
- UAW reaches tentative labor agreement with Ford, potentially ending partial strike
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
U.S. sees spike in antisemitic incidents since beginning of Israel-Hamas war, Anti-Defamation League says
Rep. Bowman of New York faces misdemeanor charge in fire alarm pulled in House office building
What we know about the mass shooting in Maine so far
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
Book excerpt: Mary and the Birth of Frankenstein by Anne Eekhout
NFL trade deadline targets: 23 players who could be on block
Hyundai to hold software-upgrade clinics across the US for vehicles targeted by thieves