Home » New York solid waste plan aims to boost recycling, lower emissions – GWC Mag

New York solid waste plan aims to boost recycling, lower emissions – GWC Mag

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The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation is calling for a series of measures to increase recycling of the state’s total waste stream to 85% by 2050, including developing a universal EPR framework, expanding organics recycling and implementing a disposal surcharge for all disposed waste.

It announced the proposals as part of the agency’s 10-year solid waste management plan, which it released in December. The plan has six focus areas: waste reduction and reuse; recycling, recycling market development and resiliency; product stewardship and extended producer responsibility; organics reduction and recycling; toxics reduction in products; and advanced design and operation of solid waste management facilities and related activities. 

“The state’s new Solid Waste Management Plan is a roadmap for advancing more sustainable solid waste management to reduce landfilled waste and address one of New York’s largest contributors to climate-altering greenhouse gases,” DEC Commissioner Basil Seggos said in a release. “Working closely with DEC’s state, local, and community partners, New York State is bolstering existing efforts to divert waste from landfills, return materials back to productive use, and reduce climate emissions.”

In its announcement, the agency highlighted efforts it made to improve the circularity of materials since its previous 10-year plan took effect in 2010. That includes providing more than $5 million in total grant funding for food scrap recycling or emergency food donation programs and securing a U.S. EPA Solid Waste Infrastructure for Recycling grant that will help create an online reporting system for waste and recycling facilities, per the release.

New York’s recycling rate has increased since its last plan, but that’s almost entirely due to increases in C&D recycling, as the MSW recycling rate has essentially stagnated. The plan relies on data from 2018 and does not reflect changes in the recycling market since then due to China’s National Sword policy or the COVID-19 pandemic. The agency is partnering with Stony Brook University on an analysis of more recent data from those years.

In 2018, 43% of the state’s 42.2 million tons of MSW was recycled. Of the rest, 32% was landfilled in the state, 8% was incinerated in the state and 17% was exported out of state.

The agency also estimates that per capita MSW generation remained essentially unchanged from 2008 to 2018. While the state is still seeking to reduce that number, it considers the metric to be a positive sign because waste generation generally grows when an area’s gross domestic product grows, as the state’s did by 35% over the same period.

To achieve further reductions, the agency’s action items include several measures that need support from the state legislature. That includes a call for EPR for packaging as well as a framework that DEC can use to implement EPR for any other materials the state would like to regulate. Such a framework would “establish a comprehensive process for recommending, developing, proposing, and passing new EPR laws that follow best practices,” per the plan. The agency hopes to begin using such a framework in 2027.

Other legislative asks include an expansion of the state’s bottle bill, EPR for textiles, minimum post-consumer content requirements for certain materials, support for public-private partnerships for recycling facility development, funding for on-site organics processing capacity and more. Several of those items, especially EPR, have earned attention from Albany in recent years as the legislature looks to support DEC.  

Landfilling

In 2018, New York’s landfills received nearly 12.5 million tons of waste, 75% of which went to MSW landfills. But as landfill and incinerator capacity in the state continues to tighten, the agency’s plan takes aim at waste disposal.

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