How To Divide Garbage To Minimize The Landfill

In most communities, reducing, reusing, and recycling waste has become a standard practice to minimize the amount of garbage going into landfills. Sorting your waste will often depend on the recycling program in your community. Most have guidelines published for residents. There are general guidelines, though.

Sorting garbage can reduce the impact on landfill by about 75%. The first step is to separate the organic/food waste from all the other garbage. That means anything that has grown; vegetable matter, meat, yard waste, tea bags, coffee grounds, eggshells and table scraps. These materials are all compostable, and many communities use the compost for plants and trees by roadsides and in town gardens, and sometimes sell the compost to home gardeners. It is also possible to compost in your own backyard. Compost bins are easy to construct, and once you have good compost up and running, it practically takes care of itself.

The next category of garbage is the bottles, tin foil and cans. This might include juice and milk cartons, plastic bags, bubble wrap, rigid plastic packaging. These items should be rinsed before sorting. They can all be diverted from landfill and sent for recycling. Old tires and building materials can also be diverted from landfill for recycling. Recycling equipment is used to help process these materials. Some of the products being made from these recyclables are floor tiles, road surfaces, sandals, swings, carpeting, plastic furniture and many other imaginative and creative products.

Paper and cardboard is the other broad category. This would include cardboard boxes that food such as cereal comes in. It would also include newspapers, letters and envelopes, toilet paper rolls, and any other dry clean paper product. Boxes should be flattened to minimize the bulk and making the pick-up more efficient. Paper and paper products are recycled into paper and paper products. There is an increasing demand for recycled paper from consumers and companies. The process is kinder to the environment, and calls for fewer trees to be felled for paper. Landfills are filling up across the continent. By removing those items that can be recycled – paper, cardboard, glass, wood, organic matter – we reduce the impact on landfill sites. We also minimize the impact of landfill seepage into the water table. Making our garbage as small as possible reduces our imprint on the planet, and extends the life and health of our landfills.

When organic matter ends up in a landfill, the normal breakdown into nutrients does not occur, because the fill is packed so tightly that air does not circulate around the decaying matter. Rather than return nutrients to the earth, organic matter under those conditions produces methane, which contributes to global warming. Landfills become clogged with items that will never degrade, such as plastics. In the manufacturing process, petroleum, the primary element of plastics, is altered so that it is not recognized by the bacteria and enzymes that break down matter to its reusable form. Removing these products from landfill and sending them off to be reused is a more efficient way of handling the resources that are in limited supply. There are other products that may degrade naturally if exposed to sunlight, but that also is unlikely in a heavily packed landfill. Again, removing those items from that stream, and sending them to new uses through recycling saves energy, resources and the health of the planet.

Recycling can take up a lot of space. Using compaction equipment to help compress recyclables is a great way to not only speed up the process, but save time and money in the long run. Look up on compactor today – improve your waste removal and disposal!


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Posted on January 16th, 2010 by Adriana Noton and filed under Compost | No Comments »

MyZeroWaste.com basic home recycling

See how 90% of one day's average kitchen waste can be recycled or composted. …

Duration : 0:8:58

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Posted on March 30th, 2009 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | No Comments »

Keith Floyd – Composting

Don't think leftovers, think compost. TV commercial to promote the awareness that we can compost our leftover food. …

Duration : 0:0:31

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Posted on March 30th, 2009 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 5 Comments »

Recycle Dude and the Compost Kid MN&E

Nick and Mike’s sectret identities as Recycle Dude and the Compost Kid are revealed when the Trasher threatens the environment.

Duration : 0:2:37

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Posted on January 21st, 2009 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 25 Comments »

Coffee to Compost

A video about composting coffee into compost.

Duration : 0:2:5

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Posted on January 3rd, 2009 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 5 Comments »

Compost Part 2–The Turn

Part 2 The proper way to turn your compost pile and uses for compost in the garden

Duration : 0:4:41

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Posted on December 26th, 2008 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

Urban Composting with Bokashi Part 1

EcoTools presents Urban Composting With Bokashi Part 1 – shows what to do when your kitchen composter is full.

The kitchen composter is a fermentation container that turns food scraps into valuable compost! Just add your food scraps, sprinkle with Bokashi, and seal tight. Since it ferments — as opposed to decomposes — there are no malodors, just a light fermentation smell. Harvest the tea after a few weeks and bury the fermented compost in the garden whn full. Your garden will thrive !!

Visit http://ecotools.info for details on the kitchen composter and how to recycle your food scraps.

Duration : 0:7:41

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Posted on December 24th, 2008 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 2 Comments »

The Worm Cycle

Explaining the cycle of vermiculture at the SVSU greenhouses.

Duration : 0:3:9

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Posted on November 26th, 2008 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | No Comments »

Worm Bins

Do the ultimate recycling with these worm bins. Let the worms and mother nature turn your kitchen scraps and even your dog waste into fertilizer.

Duration : 0:4:1

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Posted on November 18th, 2008 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

Birmingham pupils going green with Climate Change Champion

Ziana Kotadia, West Midlands Climate Change Champion, talks to local schoolkids about recycling at the Kitchen Garden Café, Kings Heath. Brett from the cafe demonstrates a wormery.

Duration : 0:1:30

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Posted on November 3rd, 2008 by admin and filed under Uncategorized | 1 Comment »