January-February 2008

Greenwaste: From Resource to Commodity

Like an unwanted houseguest, greenwaste has been kicked out of landfills. Stricter air-quality regulations make it hard if not impossible to burn. So what’s to be done with all the greenwaste leaving homes and businesses and heading for local landfills?

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By Diane Gow McDilda

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The EPA estimates that approximately 13% of the American wastestream is composed of yardwaste. To reduce the volume of material taking up space in landfills, much of the incoming woodwaste has been diverted. In 2005, 62% of greenwaste was recycled. Regardless of the capacity of a solid waste facility, being able to redirect even a portion of the incoming wastestream extends the life of the landfill and helps alleviate the burden of siting a new facility or expanding an existing facility.

The Landfill of North Iowa accepts approximately 400 tons of solid waste per day. Of that, 140 tons of yardwaste are diverted into mulch, animal bedding, and compost that residents can pick up for free. It’s a sought-after commodity that frequently runs out. “Someone just took the last shovelful of our summer compost,” says Bill Rowland, director of the landfill.

While waste diversion is one of the largest drivers in converting yardwaste into mulch and compost, other factors spurred the move. Where recycling goals are mandated or associated with grant money, there is financial incentive to recycle yardwaste. Other drivers include bans, or stricter regulatory requirements, on burning yardwaste. In some instances, a municipality’s effort to divert incoming yardwaste is less about volume and more about reducing methane emissions.

Generally, the greenwaste scene plays out as this: Municipal landfills accept either through curbside collection or through drop-off a variety of greenwaste including yard trimmings, grass cuttings, and even used wooden pallets. The incoming wastestream is sorted with larger bulkier woodwastes going to mulch and the smaller items going to compost. Some facilities have added equipment to process bulkier woodwaste into their compost piles. Mulch is often given out to residents or, while it defeats the efforts of diversion, used as daily cover and erosion control in the landfill. Oftentimes, a minimal amount of effort is used so that it can simply be gotten rid of.

Commercial operations, on the other hand, are run to generate a profit by selling an added-value product. More commonly, they take in yardwaste along with foodwaste, crop residues, wastewater sludges, manure, and other organics and cook up a sellable product.

 

So, What’s in a Pile?
Turning raked-up leaves or mowed grass clippings into a viable compost relies on the microorganisms biodegrading, or eating, the waste. Microbes require an oxygen level greater than 10% and moisture levels ranging from 40% to 60% to thrive.

It’s important for nutrient levels to be balanced with a carbon-to-nitrogen ratio of 30:1. Leaves, bark, paper, and wood are high in carbon, while grass clippings, sludge, manure, and foodwastes are high in nitrogen. Leaves and wood can decompose on their own, but adding grass clippings will up the rate.

Composting generates heat, and measuring temperature is often used to monitor the process. Nathan O’Connor is the compost product manager for Reotemp Instrument Corp., a company that manufactures industrial thermometers and sells to both municipal and commercial clients. Products range from a simple model for use with backyard composting to more elaborate and even wireless systems with data loggers.

Turning the pile, the temperature can be maintained throughout until decomposition is complete. Reaching sufficient temperature, approximately 140ºF, ensures that weed seeds and such pathogens as salmonella and fecal coliform are killed.

Composting usually takes place in windrows, where aeration is handled through turning and mixing, or aerated static piles, where a perforated pipe pumps air up through the pile. The other option is in-vessel composting, where temperature and oxygen can be monitored continuously. In-vessel is generally saved for commercial operations or those that incorporate wet waste from food, manure, or sludge and are more likely to need odor control and stricter stormwater requirements.

Photo: Wildcat
A fast-screener turns a windrow.

Sales Are Up
Greenwaste processing requires equipment. And with the push to recycle and utilize greenwaste, it’s a great time to sell not just compost equipment but anything associated with the handling of organic waste.

Bandit Industries Inc. sells The Beast. It’s a cuttermill grinder that can process anything from stumps and logs to brush and wet leaves. Co-owner Jerry Morey has seen the demand for equipment increase here in the US and abroad. “The industry is strong,” Morey says. “Recycling is becoming more important, and someday all greenwaste will be recycled. It’s happening all over the world.”

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The biological process of producing compost is highly dependent on the physical process. Grinding reduces material size and generates a consistently sized feedstock, just what the microbes want. The material is then composted for periods ranging from months to a year or more, all while it’s being aerated. After the cooking is done, the compost is screened using a trommel to remove any large un-degraded or nondegradable items (like dog-abandoned tennis balls) and put out to dry, or cure.

Mixers can be used on either the front or the back end of composting. Garland Smith with Roto-Mix explains that the company manufactures mixers that can either combine the incoming material—from grass clippings to woodchips to sludges—for composting or to mix seed into cured compost. Next Page >

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