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Maine Waste Composition Study Discovering Resources in Maine’s Trash
35

Project began in Summer of 2011 Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each Looked at both composition of waste.

Dec 16, 2015

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Imogene Powers
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Page 1: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Maine Waste Composition Study

Discovering Resources in Maine’s Trash

Page 2: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Background

Project began in Summer of 2011

Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each

Looked at both composition of waste along with method for recycling and waste stream

Only sampled residential “baggable” waste

Page 3: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Municipality/Facility Approximate 2010 Service Population County

Bath 8,514 Sagadahoc

Boothbay 3,120 Lincoln

Central Penobscot (Dexter area) 6,531 Penobscot

Hatch Hill (Augusta region) 41,326 Kennebec

Houlton 6,123 Aroostook

Lincoln 5,085 Penobscot

Lisbon Falls 9,009 Androscoggin

Mid Maine (Corinth region) 9,306 Penobscot

Ogunquit 892 York

Old Town 7,840 Penobscot

Orono 10,362 Penobscot

Paris-Norway 10,197 Oxford

Pittsfield 4,215 Somerset

Pleasant River (Columbia Falls) 1,072 Washington

Scarborough (Ecomaine) 18,919 Cumberland

Skowhegan 8,589 Somerset

St. George (Tenants Harbor) 2,591 Knox

Total 153,691  

Page 4: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Why Waste Composition now?

Improving waste management should be a targeted effort

20 years since its inception, the 50% recycling goal has not yet been reached (currently ~ 39%)

Knowing composition will help lead to the most efficient plan of attack

No study of Maine waste has been conducted since 1991/1992 and it is prudent to assume it has changed

Page 5: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Categorization

Waste was broken into 9 major categories

Organic, Paper, Plastic, Other, Construction and Demolition, Metal, Glass, Household Hazardous, and Electronics

Over 60 subcategories were used

Page 6: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

A Day Sorting Waste

Page 7: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

A Day Sorting Waste

Collect sample of waste (no. of bags varied by location)

Broke open each bag and settled contents

Sorted into both final subcategories and several category groupings

Weighed bins, tallied results, and emptied contents as bins became full

Resorted bins with groupings as needed or at the end of the day

Page 8: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 9: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 10: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 11: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 12: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 13: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 14: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 15: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 16: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.
Page 17: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Organics; 43.28%

Paper; 25.57%

Plastic; 13.44%

Other Waste

; 5.77%

C&D; 3.35%

Metal; 3.26%

Glass; 2.71% HHW; 1.72% Electronics; 0.92%

Waste Composition for Major Categories

Page 18: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Major Category Category %

Organics 43.28%

Paper 25.57%

Plastic 13.44%

Other Waste 5.77%Construction and Demolition Debris (C&D) 3.35%

Metal 3.26%

Glass 2.71%

Household Hazardous Waste (HHZ) 1.72%

Electronics 0.92%

Waste Composition for Major Categories

Page 19: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Organics

Sub-Category% of Total

Waste% of Organic

Waste Cumulative %

Food 27.86% 64.38% 64.38%

Remainder/ Composite Organic

10.97% 25.35% 89.73%

Diapers 2.97% 6.86% 96.58%

Leaves & Grass 1.16% 2.68% 99.26%

Prunings & Trimmings 0.32% 0.74% 100.00%

Page 20: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Paper

Sub-Category% of Total

Waste% of Paper

WasteCumulative

%

Compostable 7.93% 31.02% 31.02%

Other Recyclable 4.90% 19.15% 50.17%

Remainder/ Composite Paper

4.08% 15.95% 66.12%

Magazine/ Catalog 2.88% 11.25% 77.37%

Newsprint 2.43% 9.51% 86.88%

High Grade Office 1.64% 6.41% 93.29%

Uncoated Corrugated Cardboard/ Kraft

1.61% 6.29% 99.58%

Phone Books 0.11% 0.42% 100.00%

Total 25.57% 100.00%

Page 21: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Plastic

Sub-Category% of Total

Waste% of Plastic

WasteCumulative

%

All Film 4.78% 35.61% 35.61%

Remainder/Composite Plastic 1.68% 12.50% 48.12%

Durable Plastic Items 1.41% 10.48% 58.59%

#3 - #7 Plastics 1.38% 10.25% 68.85%

HDPE Bottles 1.01% 7.50% 76.35%

Grocery/Merchandise Bags 0.82% 6.10% 82.45%

PET Containers-non bottles 0.71% 5.31% 87.76%

All Styrofoam 0.67% 4.99% 92.75%

PET Bottles/Jars 0.47% 3.50% 96.25%

Plastic ME DepositBeverage Containers 0.36% 2.68% 98.93%

HDPE Containers-non bottles 0.14% 1.07% 100.00%

Total 13.44% 100.00%

Page 22: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Metal Glass

Sub-Category% of Total

WasteTin/Steel Containers 1.45%

Other Ferrous 0.93%

Other Non-Ferrous 0.42%

Remainder/ Composite Metal

0.28%

Aluminum ME Deposit Containers

0.10%

Appliances 0.04%

Compressed Fuel Containers 0.03%

Total 3.26%

Sub-Category% of Total

WasteClear Glass Containers 1.96%

Glass ME Deposit Beverage Containers

0.41%

Green & Other Glass Containers 0.13%

R/C Glass 0.11%

Flat Glass 0.07%

Amber Glass Containers 0.02%

Total 2.71%

Page 23: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Major Category Subcategory % of Major Category % of SubcategoryOrganics 43.28%

Food 27.86%Remainder/Composite Organic 10.97%Diapers 2.97%Yard Waste 1.48%

Paper 25.57%Compostable Paper 7.93%Other Recyclable Paper 4.90%Remainder/Composite Paper 4.08%Magainze/Catalogs 2.88%Newsprint 2.43%High Grade Office Paper 1.64%Occ/Kraft 1.61%

Plastic 13.44%All Film 4.78%All Other Plastic 3.76%#3 - #7 Plastics 1.38%PET (#1) 1.18%HDPE (#2) 1.15%Grocery/Merch Bags 0.82%Plastic ME Dep. BevCont. 0.36%

Other Waste 5.77%Textiles (non-carpet) 4.26%

C&D 3.35%Metal 3.26%

Other Metal 1.71%Tin/Steel Cont. 1.45%Aluminum ME Dep. Beverage Cont. 0.10%

Glass 2.71%Clear Glass Cont. 1.96%Glass ME Dep. Bev Cont. 0.41%

Page 24: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Comparison to 1991/1992 Study

Paper percentage of total waste stream decreased by 23%

Significant decreases in Cardboard and High Grade Office Paper

Substantial decrease (75%) in Newsprint

Type of Paper

91/92 % of Total Waste Stream

2011 % of Total Waste Steam

Corrugated cardboard

2.92 1.61

High grade office

3.04 1.64

Magazines/ catalogs

2.92 2.88

Newsprint 9.88 2.43

Telephone books

0.19 0.11

Total of all paper

33.04 25.57

Page 25: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Comparison to 1991/1992 Study

Plastics bag waste cut in half

Rigid plastics has increased by 160%

Plastic percentage of total waste stream has doubled

Plastic Film waste much of increase

Type of Plastic

91/92 % of Total Waste Stream

2011 % of Total

Waste Stream

Plastic bags 1.59 0.82

All HDPE 1.23 1.15

Rigid plastics 1.12 2.92

Total of all plastic 6.69 13.44

Page 26: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Comparison to 1991/1992 Study

Metal stays consistent while individual categories have varied from1992

Glass has decreased by a third with Clear Glass Containers decreasing by 30% from 1992

Type of Metal

91/92 % of Total

Waste Stream

2011 % of Total

Waste Stream

Tin/steel containers 2.28 1.45

Ferrous 0.55 0.93

Non-ferrous 0.07 0.42

Aluminum 0.39 0.10

Total of all metal 3.29 3.26

Type of Glass

91/92 % of Total Waste Stream

2011 % of Total

Waste Stream

Clear Glass Containers 3.39 2.37

Green/Amber Containers

0.17 0.15

All other Glass 0.50 0.19

Total of all Glass 4.06 2.71

Page 27: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Variations in Recyclable Material

Newsprint Broken down

by town sampled, variations are apparent

Distribution skewed to the right

Some towns have much better recovery rates

Page 28: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Variations in Recyclable MaterialClear Glass

Distribution is tighter for clear glass containers and near normal

Standard deviation is less than half of newsprint

Page 29: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Composition by Stream

Waste39.87%

Compostable38.41%

Recyclable21.72%

Page 30: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Notes on Stream Classification

Classification is by:

What is widely recycled around the state Compostable without significant effort What is currently not diverted in a

significant amount of locations around the state

Not a perfect analysis due to fungible nature between categories of many items.

Page 31: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Top 10 Waste Subcategories

Waste Category% of Total

WasteCumulative % of Total

Waste

Food Waste 27.86% 27.86%

R/C Organic 10.97% 38.83%Compostable Paper 7.93% 46.76%Other Recyclable Paper 4.90% 51.66%

All Film 4.78% 56.44%Textiles (non-carpet) 4.26% 60.70%

R/C Paper 4.08% 64.78%

Diapers 2.97% 67.75%

Magainze/Catalogs 2.88% 70.62%

Newsprint 2.43% 73.05%

Page 32: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Topics for Discussion

Where can the next advances in recycling come?

What can be improved? Methods, actions, enforcement, technology.

What can be added and/or promoted everywhere? Textiles, film, grocery bags, hard plastics not #1-

7, composites, etc.

Page 33: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Topics for Discussion

How can we better utilize compositing to decrease the waste stream

Regional composting? Is it feasible? Cost-effective? What process

should be used? Can we control the smell?

Backyard composting Public perception, animal issues, individual

responsibility.

Page 34: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Topics for Discussion

What are best practices in Waste Management? Pay-as-you-throw, Single-Stream, curbside

collection, drop-off, mandatory recycling, HHW collection, citizen education, etc.

Page 35: Project began in Summer of 2011  Sampled waste of 17 municipalities and regional transfer stations twice each  Looked at both composition of waste.

Take-Home’s

State is still not near 50% recycling goal

Waste composition has transformed with time

Plastic waste on rise as paper and glass decline

Recyclables in waste stream is over 20% and

compostable material is nearly 40%

Top 10 waste subcategories account for 73.05%

of the waste

There are widespread variations by town and by

subcategory that are observed