Zero Waste: Page 5
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Zero waste and job creation go hand in hand, activists say
Zero waste jobs are opportunities to support workers from overburdened communities, according to speakers at the National Zero Waste Conference, but they must prioritize circular economy and environmental justice principles.
By Megan Quinn • Dec. 2, 2022 -
How local governments are charting the future of zero waste
See Janmckinley’s map of which U.S. communities are pursuing zero waste, plus insights from leaders in the field on the concept’s past, present and future.
Updated Dec. 20, 2022 -
Tracker
Mapping zero waste cities: Where local governments are pursuing waste prevention and diversion
Janmckinley is tracking which communities throughout the U.S. have zero waste goals, how they define those efforts and how much progress they’ve made.
By Maria Rachal , Cole Rosengren , Julia Himmel • Updated Dec. 22, 2022 -
Beyond recycling: What’s next for effective zero waste planning
Despite constraints, experts say that bringing more voices to the table, linking efforts to climate and economic resilience goals, pursuing public-private partnerships and looking for non-policy solutions can all advance progress.
By Maria Rachal • Nov. 30, 2022 -
A history of US cities adopting zero waste goals
The concept has become a mainstream part of municipal waste planning, experts say, even as targets largely remain aspirational and some recent efforts have faced pandemic-related setbacks.
By Cole Rosengren • Nov. 30, 2022 -
Seattle plans to move beyond diversion rate goals as it doubles down on waste prevention
Through its current solid waste plan update, Seattle Public Utilities hopes to develop metrics that better reflect the environmental and circular economy benefits from the city’s progress on waste prevention and reuse.
By Maria Rachal • Nov. 28, 2022 -
With $100M in recycling and waste grants now available, EPA schedules info sessions on how to apply
The agency will host multiple workshops about how state, territorial and local governments can make their case for the highly anticipated infrastructure and education funding.
By Megan Quinn • Updated Dec. 21, 2022 -
Opinion
What analyzing National Sword can teach us about optimizing US plastics recycling
The dust has yet to settle from the major reckoning the U.S. plastics recycling system faced, but three notable factors have the potential to change the status quo going forward, write researchers from the University of California, Berkeley.
By Jessica Heiges and Kate O’Neill • Nov. 16, 2022 -
Tracker
Tracking recycling laws by state
The Massachusetts Senate approved a proposed expansion of the state bottle bill to increase deposits to 10 cents, add more containers and make other updates.
By Megan Quinn • Updated June 26, 2024 -
EPA promises recycling infrastructure funds, new reports coming soon
During the National Recycling Congress, the U.S. EPA’s Nena Shaw said the infrastructure grant funding process is almost ready and previewed work on batteries, data collection and future reports on plastics and food waste.
By Megan Quinn • Nov. 15, 2022 -
The next frontier in e-commerce packaging: reusable bags and boxes
Online ordering spiked during the pandemic — and so did the waste it creates. As Cyber Monday approaches, startups such as Returnity and Trashless are developing ways to offer consumers and retailers an alternative.
By Lela Nargi • Nov. 15, 2022 -
Closed Loop launches new recycling company, Circular Services, with $700M investment
Combining the operations of Sims Municipal Recycling, Balcones Resources, Retrievr, HomeBiogas and more, the new company, to be led by Closed Loop CEO Ron Gonen, is being touted as a “holistic” service provider.
By Cole Rosengren • Nov. 15, 2022 -
Janmckinley // California's organics experiment
Is California’s 2025 organics diversion target still viable?
An independent commission is now assessing whether course corrections are needed for the state’s landmark SB 1383 law. CalRecycle, WM, Republic Services, Agromin, Anaergia and many others have weighed in.
By Cole Rosengren • Nov. 14, 2022 -
Elections 2022: Denver greenlights recycling expansion, a close decision on San Diego trash fees and more
Voters in California, Colorado, Michigan, New York and Vermont weighed in on a range of state and local initiatives with implications for waste and recycling as part of Tuesday’s election.
By Maria Rachal • Nov. 9, 2022 -
Q&A
Upstream CEO talks about the role of EPR in expanding reuse-refill, ‘golden opportunity’ for recycling industry
The reuse-refill sector has become increasingly mainstream, as shown by the nonprofit’s Reusies award event. Matt Prindiville shares his latest outlook on where it’s going next and how the traditional waste industry can be involved.
By Cole Rosengren • Nov. 7, 2022 -
Plastic markets fall, EPA urged to update policies and other top recycling stories from October
The month’s notable recycling headlines include recent plastic market trends, questions about the United States' long-held waste hierarchy and calls to standardize recycling bin labels.
By Megan Quinn • Nov. 2, 2022 -
Is EPR an answer to compostable packaging’s contamination and labeling hurdles?
Extended producer responsibility laws can and should encompass compostable packaging, industry players at a recent Product Stewardship Institute webinar said.
By Megan Quinn • Updated Nov. 15, 2022 -
Mattress, textile, organics disposal bans begin in Massachusetts
The state’s Department of Environmental Protection is now requiring local governments and businesses to keep certain materials out of the waste stream.
By Cole Rosengren • Nov. 1, 2022 -
Environmental justice voices in the waste and recycling industry
Catch up on these Q&A conversations with experts from the U.S. EPA, Ya Fav Trashman, Detroit Dirt and others on how the waste and recycling industry can play a role in environmental justice efforts.
By Megan Quinn • Updated March 14, 2023 -
San Antonio targets demolition waste, spurs material reuse with deconstruction ordinance
In linking a waste reduction effort with other priorities, like affordable housing — a concern in one of the fastest-growing U.S. cities — San Antonio hopes to send less to landfills and make progress on zero waste aspirations.
By Maria Rachal • Oct. 25, 2022 -
Retrieved from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Could the EPA’s preference for ‘energy recovery’ change as it evaluates waste hierarchy, other tools?
The agency is reevaluating its longstanding materials management hierarchy and waste reduction model as part of broader research efforts. Advocacy groups have pushed to reduce any emphasis on incineration.
By Cole Rosengren • Oct. 24, 2022 -
Composting in wine country: Napa Valley’s multi-decade circular economy story
California’s organics recycling law is driving new demand for processing infrastructure. Longstanding efforts by Upper Valley Disposal and others to compost grape pomace have given the region a head start.
By Karine Vann • Oct. 19, 2022 -
Q&A
New nonprofit Just Zero taking a national approach to zero waste and closing disposal sites
Zero waste advocates formerly with the Conservation Law Foundation say the group will provide local activists with national-level resources for drafting legislation and more.
By Megan Quinn • Oct. 18, 2022 -
Retrieved from The Rounds on October 10, 2022
Zero-waste online grocer The Rounds raises $38M
The newly announced Series A financing follows a $4 million seed round at the start of this year for the scaling grocery refill delivery service.
By Catherine Douglas Moran • Oct. 12, 2022 -
Reuse tech startup Rheaply targets C&D waste with Materials Marketplace acquisition
CEO Garry Cooper says adding the platform from the U.S. Business Council for Sustainable Development will expand Rheaply’s reach and allow existing customers to exchange items more broadly.
By Maria Rachal • Oct. 10, 2022