What a Dump!: California's goal is to someday have zero waste.
Zero Tolerance
From rethinking recycling to reconsidering our relationship to trash,
the zero-waste movement challenges conventional wisdom
By Jordan E. Rosenfeld
A guaranteed conversation-stopper, the topic--and indeed, the
reality--of garbage is not going to go away any time soon. Moreover,
there are a number of widely held public assumptions that impede
progress toward that elusive goal which garbologists refer to as "zero
waste."
Assumption one:
Garbage is one of those facts of life that falls in with other
inevitabilities like death and taxes. Human beings are a consumptive
lot, and the byproducts of all that consumption have to go somewhere.
Assumption two: Garbage companies do us all a great service by whisking
away the nasty byproducts of our lives and hauling them off to those
big holes in the ground euphemistically referred to as "landfills."
Assumption three: Recycling is enough.
After all, it's good for the bottle, it's good for
the can. Well, not exactly.
Members of a growing movement of garbage activists--environmental
consultants, members of solid waste task forces, those who oversee the
flow of garbage and a few concerned ordinary citizens--are pushing the
zero-waste agenda in both the public and political arenas. They ask
nothing less of us than to reexamine our assumptions about
garbage--before it buries us alive.
In fact, zero waste is one of California's latest goals. The state's
Integrated Waste Management Board believes we must "redefine the
concept of waste in our society. In the past, waste was considered a
natural byproduct of our culture. Now, it is time to recognize that
proper resource management, not waste management, is at the heart of
reducing waste sent to landfills."
Does Garbage Exist?
Paul Palmer is the author of the book Getting to Zero Waste,
having coined the phrase in the '80s. Possessing a Ph.D. in chemistry
from Yale, Palmer ran a chemical recycling business called Zero Waste
Systems for 10 years in Berkeley before becoming the movement's
greatest proponent.
"You talk to
people, and they'll tell you that garbage has always been and always
will be," Palmer explains by telephone from his Sebastopol home. "How
do they know that? There's no scientific analysis that says this, they
just have a gut feeling, because the garbage industry is so powerful.
The definition of garbage is something that has no owner, and is
unwanted by someone. By EPA standards, once something becomes a waste,
it can never be used again. That means if I throw away a drum of
perfectly good chemical solvent, it becomes waste."
The public's
acceptance of garbage is a form of brainwashing by a
multibillion-dollar industry with a powerful lobby, Palmer says,
because we don't want to have to think about our waste.
"Garbage companies
are little more than truckers driving material to holes in the ground
and burying it," he insists. "If you had to build a system today from
scratch where excess commodities had to be dealt with, no intelligent
person would come up with the idea of digging a hole in the ground and
dumping it. We have a social condition that is insane.
"Why do we continue to do it?" he asks rhetorically. "Because there is
an industry that has learned to make money at it, and it has
conditioned us to accept it."
Money Pits
Waste Management
Inc. is a global corporation that earns $10 billion annually and owns
over 300 landfills nationwide, including the Redwood Landfill in
Novato. According to a report posted online by the watchdog
organization Corporate Accountability International, "Waste Management,
Inc., exerts enormous influence at every level of government, including
federal agencies such as the EPA."
In 1996, Waste Management had at least 197 lobbyists in 40 states and
34 at the federal level. The corporation has been accused by the San
Diego district attorney of "practices designed to gain influence over
government officials," and has paid millions of dollars in fines for
violations and class action lawsuit settlements around the country for
charges ranging from contamination to fraud.
There are two
kinds of landfill operations: publicly owned and privately owned.
Redwood Landfill is private. Dumps generate income by collecting a
payment known as a "tipping fee" for every load of garbage dropped at
their site, a term derived literally from the idea that a dump truck
tips as it off-loads.
Redwood Landfill charges a tipping fee of $44 per ton. In 2004, the
dump took in a reported 359,000 tons of trash and nearly $16 million in
revenue. Since it is privately owned, Redwood only has to concern
itself with dump operations. The county of Marin pays for hauling and
any additional services. Neither Redwood nor Waste Management Inc.
responded to repeated phone calls from the Bohemian to comment on this story.
In contrast, Sonoma County's public landfill, Sonoma Central, is owned
and operated by the county, and all fees must be approved by the board
of supervisors. Central charges $42 per ton, and took in approximately
385,000 tons of refuse in 2004. According to Ken Wells, the integrated
waste manager for Sonoma County, the public dump's income is spent
monitoring garbage stored around the county; maintaining the system of
transfer stations used to move garbage from one location to another;
educating the public; and on various other expenditures.
"The public-sector
model, which we follow, says that the landfill is a resource owned by
the community to be conserved and to last as long as possible," he says
by phone from his Santa Rosa office. "The private perspective is that
the landfill is a profit center, and they want to maximize the profit
out of their investment by filling it up as fast as possible and
building another one. I sometimes doubt how truly the privately owned
landfills believe in waste-reduction rules."
Redwood, which borders the Petaluma River on one side, is expected to
fill up by 2019, if it does not expand beyond its present boundaries.
However, environmentalists, Novato residents and the Novato City
Council have contested the proposed expansion, which would increase the
dump's capacity by 50 percent and extend its life to 2037. The dump's
environmental impact report process is currently in its second
revision.
Cynthia Barnard,
an environmental health specialist with Marin County Environmental
Health Services, which issues permits for landfill expansions in
concurrence with the state's waste-management board, believes
environmental groups tend to paint the Redwood Landfill negatively in
order to support their own agenda. Still, she admits that, compared to
the public model, the privately owned dump is "a different world" in
terms of operation. "We work with the landfill, but we're not in their
think tank; they're not running ideas by us beforehand," she says.
Meanwhile, the publicly owned Sonoma Central Landfill is also filling
up, and will begin diverting a good portion of its waste to Redwood
beginning this September. Last summer, midway through Sonoma Central's
second phase of site expansion, groundwater contamination was
discovered below the dump's liner.
Though the contaminated water was not discharged to any drinking-water
supplies and the problem was corrected, the North Coast Regional Water
Quality Control Board decided to halt the expansion, leaving Sonoma
Central in a bind. By the time the water board reviews the corrections
and approves further expansion, Sonoma Central will have exceeded its
current capacity.
Immediate action was necessary. After studying the options, the Sonoma
County Board of Supervisors voted to ship waste to Vallejo's Potrero
Hills Landfill and to Redwood for the next three to five years. The
decision has met with mixed response.
"There are a
number of people who feel that shipping our garbage out of county is
putting the responsibility on other counties," says waste management
consultant Portia Sinnott, a member of the Sonoma County task force on
solid waste. "Sonoma has one of the best landfills in California--it's
state-of-the-art. Exporting out of county doesn't guarantee that the
landfills we'll be using are any better. All landfills have problems;
it is an inexact science. Even the EPA acknowledges this."
Wells agrees that
shipping out of county is not the ideal choice, but says that there was
neither time nor money to pursue other options, such as increasing
mandatory recycling levels to 70 percent, diverting construction and
demolition debris from entering the landfill, or even enacting bans on
creating new landfills in the county.
"We have a policy
that says we'll take care of our own garbage, and the board's decision
clearly works against that attitude," says Wells. "I'm disappointed
that we got to this point and couldn't negotiate with the water board
for expansion sooner. Even more important to some people is the $15
million we'll be paying out of county each year we ship our waste out."
But he adds, "I want to be clear that we will be going ahead with the expansion eventually."
Even though
Redwood promotes recycling, there is concern in the zero-waste camp
that corporate-owned dumps whose parent companies have lobbyists in
Washington have less incentive to reduce waste than public landfills.
"They do what they have to, but they aren't working creatively on waste-management solutions," Wells says.
Still, on the long road toward zero waste, whether a dump is public or
private may matter less than cultural attitudes toward garbage. Paul
Palmer notes that the term "landfill" appeared out of the PR ether in
the last 20 years, replacing the more repulsive but realistic "dump."
And as long as the public sees weekly garbage pick-up as a right, and a
convenient one at that, changes may be slow to come.
Radical Refuse
In Palmer's ideal
model, dumps would be shut down and all garbage-hauling companies put
out of business, forcing society and individuals to come up with
creative solutions to waste problems. At the same time, he fears that
society has become so reliant on the garbage industry that expecting
radical change may be unrealistic. He feels the problem needs to be
addressed at the manufacturing level, beginning with design. Palmer
envisions large filling stations with thousands of spigots or bins,
like a large grocery store minus all the packaging. Consumers would
bring their own packages and simply refill them.
"The most important thing about any commodity is its function, not the
material it's composed of," he says. "So you want to reuse the function
of the bottle by refilling it."
Like Palmer, Ken
Wells feels that the United States could make great strides in waste
reduction by relying less on dumps, and holding manufacturers
responsible for the waste that their products create.
"Unfortunately,
we're a consuming society where the people with the big bucks are
writing the laws," Wells says. "One of the problems is something known
as 'externalities.' For instance, you may remember those little shoes
for kids with lights in them. The first year they were made, they
contained mercury-based batteries. When those shoes were [discarded],
they were hazardous waste. But what did the manufacturer have to pay
for dealing with that waste? Zero. The manufacturer externalized the
cost of disposing of this product on to the public. The solid-waste
industry was left holding the bag. In Europe and Canada, manufacturers
don't get away with that. They're responsible for the entire process."
Reaching this
state of responsibility requires legislation that would encourage
manufacturers, through the use of economic penalties and incentives, to
design responsible products. But because the garbage lobby exerts such
tremendous influence over local, state and federal legislatures, Well
avers that it will actually "take campaign finance reform" to effect
real change.
Reduce Reuse Rethink
Wells and other
garbage activists are hopeful that public-information campaigns will
help produce a shift in attitudes on behalf of the public, politicians
and industry. Reaching zero waste means rethinking everything, even in
such areas as recycling, where the public has only been coaxed aboard
relatively recently.
It's not that
recycling doesn't make a difference; it does--a big difference. Wells
points out that in Sonoma County, only 15 percent of the waste stream
was recycled in 1990. By 2003, 55 percent was recycled. But 55 percent
is not enough. The California Integrated Waste Management Board
recently upped its recycling-rate target to 75 percent, aiming in the
long term to reach 100 percent.
However, it may be
difficult to motivate the public to recycle more than it currently is,
according to Portia Sinnott. In fact, Sinnott believes that recycling
as it currently exists may not bring us any closer to zero waste,
because by the time a person recycles a bottle or can, it's only one
step away from being garbage.
"Recycling and zero waste are not the same things," she says.
"Recycling is a form of managing discards at the tail end of the
process. In some cases, people feel more comfortable consuming more
simply because they recycle."
The next step up
from recycling is reuse, which means investing in commodities that are
reusable--and then actually convincing people to reuse them.
Paul Palmer helps make the distinction. "What we know as recycling is
the lowest possible form of reuse," he says. "Recycling means you
create a waste and then, at the last minute, when you have no other
choice, you try to find a new home for it in its degraded condition.
When you break a bottle, you lose 98 percent of its value because all
you've got now is broken glass; you throw away all the resources that
went into making it, the labor and time and money." He suggests that we
stop manufacturing products that lend themselves to easy disposal and
treat such commodities differently, so that a glass bottle gets reused
long before it ever gets smashed.
"Another thing
we've got to do is make products much more repairable," he adds. "One
of the specific recommendations I make in my book is to offer the
blueprints of products on the Internet so that people can fix things
themselves. Information is key.
"Right now there
is no infrastructure for taking responsibility," he continues.
"Everyone has just glommed on to the scheme, the 'out' of throwing
stuff away. 'I don't care' is the essence of an irresponsible society."
The Institute for
Local Self-Reliance, a Washington, D.C.-based organization that
promotes sustainable communities, encourages grassroots groups to
petition local governments for "extended producer responsibility"
legislation that will hold manufacturers legally responsible for the
disposal of their products.
In the meantime,
Wells says that Sonoma County will continue to work on educating the
public. "Generally people want to do the right thing, and more often
than not, if you give them the information and the opportunity, they
will," he says. "As for the business sector, it pretty much comes down
to the bottom line. Save them money, and they'll do the right thing."
[ North Bay | Metroactive Central | Archives ]
|