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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

NYC plans huge waste output reduction

Jonathan Lemire Associated Press

NEW YORK – The nation’s biggest city, in a far-reaching effort to limit its impact on the environment, is set to mark Earth Day by announcing the ambitious goal of reducing its waste output by 90 percent by 2030.

The Zero Waste plan, which includes an overhaul of the city’s recycling program, incentives to reduce waste and tacit support for the City Council’s plan to dramatically reduce the use of plastic shopping bags, will be announced by Democratic Mayor Bill de Blasio today. Its goal is sweeping: New York would be the largest city in the Western Hemisphere to adopt the plan, which aims to reduce its waste by more than 3 million tons from its 2005 level of about 3.6 million tons.

The waste reduction plan is part of an update to the sustainability project named PlaNYC, created by de Blasio’s predecessor, Michael Bloomberg, to provide a framework for mitigating the impacts of population growth and a changing climate on the city’s infrastructure. De Blasio is rebranding the plan OneNYC.

“The average New Yorker throws out nearly 15 pounds of waste a week, adding up to millions upon millions of tons a year,” de Blasio said in a statement to the Associated Press. “To be a truly sustainable city, we need to tackle this challenge head on.”

For decades, the city’s trash has been exported by rail or barge and sent to facilities in South Carolina, Virginia, New Jersey, Pennsylvania or upstate New York. The new plan would eliminate almost all of the exports, which currently cost more than $350 million a year.

The amount of waste produced by the city has fallen 14 percent since 2005 because of an increase in recycling, and a key component of the Zero Waste plan is to bolster this by simplifying the process.

Currently, residential buildings have two types of recycling bins. The city’s new single-stream plan, already used by other cities, would consolidate all of the recycling into one type of bin by 2020.

Organics — food scraps, yard waste and other things that cannot be recycled — make up 31 percent of the city’s residential waste stream. A program to collect that material directly from residents’ homes is being expanded to nearly 200,000 residents by year’s end, and officials want to serve every city home by the end of 2018. The city, which has about 8.5 million residents, also will offer economic incentives to participate.