Organics Workshop-Organics Diversion as Part of the Greater Strategic Shift Away from Disposal: K.C. Alexander & Diane Duva from CT DEEP present Connecticut's Solid Waste Master plan to divert organics from the waste stream.
Horngren’s Cost Accounting A Managerial Emphasis, Canadian 9th edition soluti...
Building CT's State-Wide Capacity for Food Scrap Recycling
1. Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection
Building CT’s State-Wide Capacity
for Food Scrap Recycling
Diane Duva, Assistant Division Director
KC Alexander, Environmental Analyst
Waste Engineering and Enforcement Division
Bureau of Materials Management and Compliance Assurance
March 19, 2013
MassRecycle
R3 Recycling & Organics Conference
2. CT’s Food Scrap Recycling
Infrastructure Gap:
Value to be Unlocked
Tons
3. Closing the Organics Recycling
Infrastructure Gap: 3 key steps
• Solid Waste Management Plan:
– www.ct.gov/deep/swmp
• Where are the generators:
– Food Residuals Mapping link
• What’s still in the trash:
– Waste Characterization link
If any trouble with links, search key terms at www.ct.gov/deep/recycle
6. Compostable Materials By Weight
Overall Statewide Disposed
Source: CT Statewide Solid Waste Composition and
Characterization Study Final Report 2009 – Table 6
Material Est. Percent Est. Tons
Food Waste 13.5% 321,481
Compostable Paper 8.2% 195,185
Leaves & Grass 7.2% 172,408
Prunings & Trimmings 2.2% 51,550
Branches & Stumps 0.4% 10,149
Total 31.5% 750,773
What is Still in Connecticut’s Trash?
7. Purpose of Public Act 11-217
The purpose of the law is to incentivize companies to establish
facilities in Connecticut so that everyone will have the option to
reduce the costs of disposal by recycling food waste rather than
disposing of it.
The law is intended to get a valuable resource out of our trash
and into local commerce and made into valuable products such
as compost and clean energy.
Goals:
• Save businesses money through avoided disposal cost savings.
• Promote clean energy investments because it provides certainty
of feedstock to clean energy businesses.
• Encourage economic development by encouraging businesses to
locate in Connecticut.
• Move up the waste management hierarchy to higher value use.
8. How this law works
The law requires large-scale commercial
generators of food waste that generate more
than 104 tons per year [about 2 tons per week],
to recycle source-separated organic material,
once permitted capacity is available.
Applicable to:
1. Commercial food wholesalers or distributors
2. Industrial food manufacturers or processors
3. Supermarkets, [large stores, typically with 69+
employees] (CT Food Association supported passage)
4. Resorts and conference centers.
9. Specifics
• Definitions of “Source-Separated Organic Material” and
“Composting Facility” are in the law: Public Act 11-217.
• The law kicks in once we have enough permitted composting
facilities in the state that can handle the material generated
from the above facilities. (May be clarified this legislative
session.)
• The law does not apply to municipalities, hospitals, schools, etc.
—just large-scale commercial generators.
• A generator is not required to divert their food waste to a
recycling facility if there is not a recycling facility within 20 miles
of the generator.
– The reduced disposal costs associated with lower tipping fees at recycling
facilities vs. at resource recovery facilities and landfills is the economic
incentive that will be the real action driver (i.e. we expect generators to
look to recycling facilities for lower-cost options).
– This exemption is intended to offset any concerns about mandates.
10. Proposed Changes to PA 11-217
• SB 1081 introduced by Environment Committee on
3-7-13. An Act Concerning Recycling and Jobs.
• Removes existing implementation language and
replaces with specific dates:
– On or after January 1, 2014 those same generators
(wholesaler, distributor, processor, supermarket, conf.
ctr.), within 20 miles and with 104 tpy shall source
separate and ensure recycling at a facility that has
available capacity and will accept such materials;
– On or after January 1, 2020, ALL those types of generators,
within 20 miles regardless of size, shall source separate
and ensure recycling at a facility that has available
capacity and will accept such materials
11. Sustainable Materials Management:
Changing the Way CT Values Trash
• Materials Management Summit Series Link
– Stakeholder input on direction for organics
• Governor’s Recycling Working Group Link
– Recommend incentivizing organics recycling
• Legislative Event – “Recycling Means Jobs” Link
– Organics industry presentation to legislators
• CEFIA Anerobic Digestion Pilot Project RFP Link
– $6 million over 3 years; 1 project under review
• Solid Waste Advisory Committee Link
12. Contacts
Diane Duva, Assistant Director
860-424-3271 diane.duva@ct.gov
Chris Nelson, Supervisor,
Source Reduction and Recycling Program
860-424-3454 chris.nelson@ct.gov
K.C. Alexander, Organics Recycling Specialist
Source Reduction and Recycling Program
860-424-3239 kathy.alexander@ct.gov
www.ct.gov/deep/composting
Waste Engineering and Enforcement Division
Bureau of Materials Management & Compliance Assurance
CT Department of Energy and Environmental Protection
www.ct.gov/deep/recycle
Editor's Notes
DIANE: THIS IS THE SAME SLIDE., BUT USES ONLY THE FOOD SCRAP NUMBER FROM THE CHARACTERIZATION STUDY (DOES NOT INCLUDE SOILED PAPER). I THINK THIS IS BETTER FOR COMPARING APPLES TO APPLES. Disposed = 516,666 tons in 2009 per characterization study. 321,481 tons food scrap 195,185 tons compostable paper Permitted = 55,665 tpy New Milford Farms= 53,865 tpy GreenCycle (Ellington) = 1,800 tpy (4,000 cy/yr.) Convert cy to tons: approx 900 lbs commercial food scrap/cy = 900 x 4,000 = 3,600,000 lbs 2,000 lbs/ton = 1,800 tpy Recycled = 5,016.65 tons in 2011 From reported data 2011 Out of State = 228.28 In-state = 4,788.37
Compostable Materials By Weight Overall Statewide Disposed Source: CT Statewide Solid Waste Composition and Characterization Study Final Report 2009 – Table 6 Material Est. Percent Est. Tons Food Waste 13.5% 321,481 tons Compostable Paper 8.2% 195,185 Leaves & Grass 7.2% 172,408 Prunings & Trimmings 2.2% 51,550 Branches & Stumps 0.4% 10,149 Total 31.5% 750,773