Under the proposal, by 2016 the
city will require residents to separate their food waste for collection.
Organic waste in New York City — which could otherwise be recycled for
fertilizer or natural gas — currently accounts for 1.2 million tons or
35% of landfills, and a pilot program on Staten Island achieved a
participation rate of 43%, according to the mayor’s office. Last year, Vermont introduced a bill to by 2020 require residents to recycle their food waste — and 33% of the organic waste in that state already gets composted.
As much as 40% of food goes uneaten in the U.S., according to estimates from the Department of Agriculture and the Environmental Protection Agency. Americans are, in other words, throwing out the equivalent of $165 billion in wasted food every year, according to a recent analysis by the Natural Resources Defense Council, a nonprofit environmental group. In fact, one study estimates, just 15% of wasted food would be enough to feed more than 25 million Americans every year. And one in six Americans currently lacks a secure supply of food, says Dana Gunders, an NRDC project scientist in San Francisco.
Grocery bills are the biggest household expense. The average American
family of four spends between $632 and $1,252 per month on grocery
bills, according to the Department of Agriculture’s April 2013 “Cost of
Food” survey. Composting forces people to actually see how much food
they’re throwing away and how much money they’re wasting, says Andrew
Shakman, president of LeanPath, a Portland-based company that tracks
food waste in industrial kitchens. LeanPath helped cut food waste at the
University of California, Berkeley, campus by 43%.
-- via twitter
No comments:
Post a Comment