Read Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash Online

Authors: Edward Humes

Tags: #Travel, #General, #Technology & Engineering, #Environmental, #Waste Management, #Social Science, #Sociology

Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash (33 page)

BOOK: Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash
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Nine Dragons Paper, 11

nurdles, 101–2

nylon, 125

ocean trash

age determination of plastic in, 121
beach accumulations of, 65, 102–3, 112, 123–24, 127, 252–53
buoyancy and mobility of, 102–3
cleanup project, 100–101, 109–10
endangerment of marine wildlife by, 98, 108, 112, 122, 214
entrapment in gyres, 103–6, 127
escaped and unaccounted-for plastic, 102, 127
in food chain, 99–100, 118–20
and ghost nets, 112
municipal dumping and, 28–29, 37, 46–47
Pacific Garbage Patch, 104–6, 120–21
plastic capture devices, 110–12, 113, 114
prevalence of plastic in, 96, 98–99, 106–7, 118, 121–22, 127, 214
toxin accumulation in plastic, 99, 119–20
types of plastics, 127
undocumented data on, 122

Offenhuber, Dietmar.
See
Trash Track

Orbelian, George, 109

Pacific Garbage Patch, 104–6, 120–21.
See also
ocean trash

packaging.
See also
bottles; plastic grocery bags

biodegradability of, 4–5, 158, 217
cost of, versus products contained in, 246, 257–58
as instant trash, 5, 127, 245, 246, 258
as proportion of waste stream, 35, 52

Packard, Vance, 62–63

Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs), 119–20

pigs and piggeries, 36, 38, 68–70

plasma gasification, 224, 237

plastic grocery bags

annual consumption of, 65, 191–92, 213, 217
bans and fees, 194–95, 196, 198–203, 220
chronology of, 194–95
cost to consumers, 65, 199, 218
downcycling of, 197
industry arguments for, 218–19
industry lawsuits, 193–94, 196, 200–201, 202–4, 209–16
infiltration of consumer market, 195–97
as litter, 53, 65, 188, 203
prevalence in landfills, 53, 188, 217
as proportion of waste stream, 217
recycling, 197–98, 213, 233
as symbol of wastefulness, 217–19

plastics.
See also
ocean trash; plastic grocery bags

amount unaccounted for, 7, 127
combined recycling statistics, 198, 213
impact of World War II on plastics industry, 125–26
invention and marketing of, 124–25, 126
oil to produce, 126
ubiquity of, 65, 123, 126

pollution.
See also
air pollution; ocean trash; toxic chemicals and materials

nurdle spills, 101–2
plastic bag litter, 53, 65, 188, 203

POPs (Persistent Organic Pollutants), 119–20

Portland, Oregon

food waste collection in, 238
green practices of, 221–22
plastic bag ban in, 238
trash generation and landfilling in, 223
waste management considerations of, 223–25, 237

power generation.
See also
waste-to-energy

from landfill gases, 20, 23, 31, 80, 94
plasma gasification, 224, 237
solar power, 234–35
wasted energy, 259
wind power, 229

pre-production plastic pellets, 101–2

Pritchard, Tim, 133, 134, 142

Progressive Bag Affiliates, American Chemistry Council, 210

Project Kaisei

educational mission of, 112–14
goals of, 100–101, 109–10
inspiration for, 107–8
prototype plastic capture device of, 110–12, 113, 114
Scripps partnership, 99–100, 109, 117–19
trash trawls of, 97–99

Puente Hills landfill, Los Angeles County

compacting process of, 19–22
contents of, 24, 55–57
daily flow of trash in, 29–31, 93
economic viability of, 91–92
energy generation of, 20, 23, 31
escape of grocery bags in, 53
escape of methane from, 230
leachate from, 24
as model landfill, 37
nature preserve, 19, 90–91
odor management of, 24, 31–32
origin as town dump, 26
purchase of land for, 71–72
seagull management in, 32–33
size and expansion of, 20, 23–24, 73–74, 90–91
terminal phase, 93–94

Qualcomm, 139

Quinn, Feargal, 199

Rathje, Bill, 129, 161–64.
See also
Garbage Project

Recology company, 173–76

recycling

combined plastics statistics, 198, 213
economics of, 126, 191, 198, 233
energy advantage of, 232–33
first mandatory, 29, 41–44
historical practice of, 41
impact of opaque trash bags and compacting trash trucks, 70
inefficiencies of, 138, 139–40
Materials Recovery Facilities, 44
offshore hazardous-materials facilities, 138, 142
perpetuation of wastefulness, 139, 177, 219
and plastic grocery bags, 197–98, 213
rate estimates, 7–9, 25, 134, 213
residue from, 233–34
theft of recyclable materials, 175–76

repurposing, 209, 253.
See also
artist-in-residence program, San Francisco dump

Riis, Jacob, 40

Rodriguez, Abel, 182

Rome, ancient, trash accumulation in, 27–28

Rubel, Remi, 180

San Francisco.
See also
artist-in-residence program, San Francisco dump

composting in, 175
per capita trash generation of, 177
plastic bag legislation in, 195, 200–202
recycling in, 173–76
waste hauling in, 176

sanitary landfills.
See
landfills

Sayers, Dorothy L., 17

scavenging, 41, 70, 174

Scotts Company, 205–8

Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
See
Project Kaisei

Sea Education Association, 121

seagulls, 32–33

SEAPLEX (Scripps Environmental Accumulation of Plastic Expedition).
See
Project Kaisei

Seattle, waste management in, 134

SENSEable City Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
See
Trash Track

single-use grocery bags.
See
plastic grocery bags

smart trash.
See
Trash Track

Smith, Norton, 110, 113, 114

Smith, Sheli, 152–53, 165–66

soda bottles.
See
bottles

solar power, 234–35

Solid Waste Association of North America, 54

Solid Waste Disposal Act (1965), 70

Speiser, Mike “Big Mike,” 19–22, 54, 93–94

Steiner, David.
See
Waste Management, Inc. (WMI)

Steinman, Susan Leibovitz, 180–81

Sterling, Bruce, 131

Stookey, Nathaniel, 171

Superbag Operating, Ltd., 210, 216

Superfund program, 27, 83

Swanson Foods, 66

Szaky, Tom, 204–9

TerraCycle, 204–9

Themelis, Nickolas, 227, 231–32, 233–34, 236–37

Thomas, Marta, 181

toxic chemicals and materials

in affluent versus poor neighborhoods, 150
bio-magnification, 119–20
dioxins, 49, 89, 230
entrapment through plasma gasification, 224
in e-waste, 138, 140–42
improper disposal of, 30, 56, 149–50, 158
in landfill leachate, 24, 83, 158–59
in marine plastics, 99, 119–20
mass burn technology output, 230
municipal collection programs, 149–50
in plastics, 66, 258
Superfund program, 27, 83
waste-to-energy emissions, 88, 89, 230, 232

trash.
See also
Garbage Project; Trash Track;
specific types and issues

amount generated, 4–5, 7–9, 15, 52, 150–51, 256–57
as archaeological record, 22, 145–46
closed loop system, 76, 77, 175, 236
components of, 34, 35
costs of, 7
emerging types of, 138
export to China, 9–11
facts about, 15, 95–96
invisibility of, 6, 57, 139
as measure of prosperity, 5–6, 58–60
receptacle size and, 150–51

trash Olympics, 54–55

Trash Track

citizen volunteers, 139
e-waste follow-up project, 141–42
findings of, 137–40
goal and inception of, 132–34
launch of trash into waste stream, 136–37
location of program, 133–34
technology used in, 134–36

Ulehla, Niki, 169–71, 185–86

Union Carbide, 70

United Nations estimate of ocean plastic, 96

upcycling, 13, 209

Vienna, waste-to-energy plant in, 230

Virginia Garbage War, 29

Wareham, William, 180

Waring, George E., 39–44

waste.
See
trash

wastefulness

cultural shift from, 236–37
invisibility of, 6, 57, 139
as mind-set and habit, 161–64, 179, 217, 219
as norm, 64, 257–59
plastic grocery bags as symbol of, 217–19
recycling as license for, 139, 177, 219
to reduce, 260–61
versus waste, 162–63

Waste Makers, The
(Packard), 62–63

waste management.
See
landfills; waste-to-energy;
specific issues

Waste Management, Inc. (WMI)

funding of Trash Track study, 132
green technologies of, 80–81
inception and growth of, 77–79
landfill business of, 75–76, 78, 80

waste-to-energy.
See also
power generation

cost of large-scale plants, 232
Danish model of, 227–29, 231
district heating, 228
emissions of, 88, 89, 230, 232
mass burn technology of, 230
objections to, 224–25
plasma gasification, 224, 237
versus recycling, 233–34
regions adopting, 25, 227, 234
small-scale operations, 227, 234–35
trash flow for, 8
unrealized visions for, 71, 73, 82, 84–90

Waste-to-Energy Research and Technology Council, 241

water bottles.
See
bottles

wind energy, 229

WMI.
See
Waste Management, Inc. (WMI)

Woodring, Doug, 109

Wright, Willard H., 68–69

Wyeth, Nathaniel, 66

Yorty, Sam, 29

Zhang Yin, 9–11

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

E
DWARD
H
UMES
is the author of eleven critically acclaimed nonfiction books, including
Force of Nature
,
Monkey Girl
,
Over Here
,
School of Dreams
,
No Matter How Loud I Shout
and the bestseller
Mississippi
Mud
. He has received the Pulitzer Prize, the PEN Award and numerous other awards for his journalism and books. He has written for the
New York Times
, the
Los Angeles Times
,
Los Angeles Magazine
and
Sierra
. He lives with his family—including the two most recent additions, a pair of rescued racing greyhounds—in California.

BOOK: Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash
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