Feed The Beast: Organic Waste Collection in a Campus Food Court Introduction: In 2012 UWO received funding through a grant from the State Energy Office.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Biomass Composition of Municipal Solid Waste Energy Retrieval from Recycling Incineration and Incinerator Ash Secure Landfills Efficiency of Conversion.
Advertisements

The manufacture of plastics requires the use of non- renewable materials such as petroleum and natural gases. Many plastics are harmful to the environment.
Community Partnerships for a University-based Renewable Energy Biodigester Michael Lizotte Director of Sustainability AASHE Conference, Pittsburgh October.
Student Objectives Use the information gained to make responsible choices in selecting everyday products and services using scientific information Evaluate.
Think Before You Throw Composting and Recycling at Black Horse Pike Schools Good for Your School Good for the Community Good for the Environment.
Cafeteria Organic Collections Program NYC Schools Secondary Education.
Our Goal: Where are we now? National Landfill Diversion Rate: 34% San Francisco’s Diversion Rate: 80% SF still sends 1400 tons to the landfill PER DAY.
Solid Waste Management
Sustainability at Sarah’s Oasis! E. Who are we? E.
1 PET is Safe Urban myths about harmful substances leaching from PET bottles from freezing or heating, leaving them in cars, etc. persist with no scientific.
How Recycling Helps By: Student Name. Aluminum Recycling Facts An aluminum can that is thrown away will still be a can 500 years from now! There is no.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
Polymer problems.
Environmental Chemistry
Cycling of Biomass and Composting
YOU WILL DEMONSTRATE AND EXPLAIN THE CYCLING OF MATTER WITHIN LIVING SYSTEMS SUCH AS IN THE DECAY OF BIOMASS IN A COMPOST BIN Cycling of Biomass and Composting.
Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle. Let’s enter a contest!
Environmental Resources Unit A Understanding Recycling and its Relationship to the Environment.
RESOURCES JEOPARDY JB Final Review Jeopardy MINING NONRENEWABLE RESOURCES RENEWABLE RESOURCES WASTEWASTE
GREEN EVENT COMPOSTING Volunteer Training. What is Compost?  Aerobic process  Microorganisms (bacteria, fungi) decompose organic matter and use as a.
WASTE FREE LUNCHES BY: TATIANA AND NADIA EGBUNINE.
ZERO WASTE AT AUSTIN ISD J ENNIFER C REGAR S USTAINABILITY C OORDINATOR * Sustainability icons designed by former Bowie High School student Celina Luckevich.
Composting.
This presentation is customizable. Insert jurisdiction specific information where there is yellow text. Also, consider putting in photos that are specific.
com/watch?v=edH488k5R ng com/watch?v=edH488k5R ng.
Recycle and Waste Video kyZbw8waVwk kyZbw8waVwk.
SOLID WASTE. It is all the rubbish people generate.
LPS Compost Program Brittney Albin Sustainability Coordinator.
Composting Part 2. Review of Composting What is composting?
Compost! Natures recycling system. We can compost anything if it can biodegrade – (rot) We call this ORGANIC WASTE.
MONDAY 1/5/15 IN A PARAGRAPH- THAT MEANS COMPLETE SENTENCES ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS. What did you do over break? Did you go anywhere or do.
Organics Out of Landfills in a Rural Region GRRN National Recycling & Zero Waste Conference October 2009 Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District.
Feed The Beast: Organic Waste Collection in a Campus Food Court Ashley Kraus & Dr. Michael Lizotte, Sustainability Office, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh.
Composting Patty Haltom. COMPOSTING! What is it? It is a simple way of people using the natural process of decomposition to make fertile soil through.
Composting and the Environment/Economy Samantha Bednarski Urvik Patel James Riordan.
By: Jen Doak.  Biogas refers to the gas that is produced by the breakdown of organic matter in the presence of NO oxygen (anaerobic digester)  Produced.
Is taking out the trash one of your chores at home? Sometimes the bags are light, other times they’re so heavy you have to drag them to the dumpster.
The Missing Piece of Zero Waste: Renee Robertson City of San Diego February 24, 2010.
Reuse and Recycle Aerobic and Anaerobic Treatment Composting
Chapter 4 Land and Soil Resources
Types of Recycling. Paper Recycling  Office paper  Newspapers  magazines with glossy pages  plastic-lined paper drink cartons (food stained paper.
Environmental Science Chapter 19 Section 2
Environmental Products of Biotechnology By Jorge Rodriguez and Success Ndalama.
What is done with Waste/Trash?. Solid Waste: Generation of Waste.
Recycling of Solid Waste February 10, 2016 Russell Schreiber, P.E. Director of Public Works.
HENNING Positives: A business is recycling #10 cans and that is great. Over 1 ton of recyclables collected in one week. The bins had very little waste.
The Conant Green Team reports to the Green Advisory Board March 7, 2016.
WILL THE WINNERS LOSE? Landfill Test Review. Objective: Be the team with the most points. When your team answers a question correctly, you can choose.
Biomass to Energy at UW Oshkosh Michael Lizotte Director of Sustainability 2010 Biotechnology Vision Summit August 25 Madison Marriott West.
biomass – organic matter that is alive or was once alive vocabulary words!
1 Recycling At EPA Sustainable Facilities Practices Branch July 16, 2009.
Impacts of Landfills Ecological, Environmental and Urban Effects.
NOTE: To change the image on this slide, select the picture and delete it. Then click the Pictures icon in the placeholder to insert your own image. CHAPTER.
Sustainability at Aquinas College
Beaver Lake Middle School Cafeteria Waste Audit
Common method of solid waste disposal.
Cafeteria Organics Collection
Lecture (5): Waste treatment and disposal
Issaquah High School Cafeteria Waste Audit
Waste Management.
Nutrient Cycles and Recycling
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, and Rot
Recycling Biomass.
Waste Management.
Waste.
Ch. 19: Waste.
Decomposer Notes.
Waste Management.
CURBSIDE RECYCLING GUIDELINES
Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District
Presentation transcript:

Feed The Beast: Organic Waste Collection in a Campus Food Court Introduction: In 2012 UWO received funding through a grant from the State Energy Office. The grant was used to implement a program called Feed the Beast. Feed the Beast was designed so that UW Oshkosh’s Student Union, Reeve Union, could become a center for the campus’s first organic waste separation bins. The organic matter that was separated was transported to the campus’s waste-to-energy biodigester (box 1). Ashley Kraus & Dr. Michael Lizotte, Sustainability Office, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. Step 1: Marketing and Educating Partnered with Reeve Marketing Named the campaign and designed the Beast (box 2) Facebook (FeedtheBeastInReeveDining) Promotional video ( Tabled in student union to collect pledges and promote with pins, t-shirts, pledges, informational hand outs, games, and coupons from local businesses Video screens and table tents Articles in UWO student newspaper Hung poster through out campus Box 1: Dry Fermentation Anaerobic Biodigester. Built in 2011, first in the western hemisphere. Uses microorganisms to decompose 6,000 tons of organic matter per year in an oxygen free environment. Biogas produced, mostly methane, is burned to create about 8% of campus electricity. Solids (undigested organic matter) go to a commercial composter or are worked into soil. Nearby university and city buildings are studying the possibility of using waste heat from the generator. Box 2 Box 3: Biodegradable? Digestable? Compostable? The UW Oshkosh biodigester is anaerobic, so it only has bacteria to decompose organic matter (no fungi, worms, insects, etc.). Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) are a family of bioplastics that can be made from plants (e.g. corn) by bacteria, and can be completely decomposed by bacteria alone. Tellus/Metabolix donated “Mirel” PHA, and Cortec donated factory time to convert it into 40-gal. trash bags. No residue from Mirel PHA bags was found in the biodigester after the 28 day cycle. Plastics labeled compostable or biodegradable do not breakdown in the dark anaerobic digester conditions. The biodigester could also accept compostable bags (e.g. PLA) since the solids from the plant eventually go to a commercial composter. Step 2: Logistics of Implementation Partnered with Sodexo, the official food service contractor for UWO, Reeve Union and University Dining Ordered the bins and garbage collection carts Ordered biodegradable bags which lined the bins (box 3) Figured the logistics of transporting the waste Step 3: Compostable Waste Collection Waste was separated from February 29 th to May 11 th into six Beast-themed containers, next to every trash and recycling bin Daily total weight measured; contamination sorted manually and weighed Organic waste was transported 1 mile from main campus to the biodigester Step 4: Results There was no change in the amount of organic waste collected or contamination levels through out the semester (box 4) Few recyclable bottles and cans were found in the Beasts (15 lbs altogether) Common contaminants were aluminum pasta pans, plastic-based cups and covers, straws, utensils, and wrappers Amount of waste that went to the biodigester was an insignificant amount of what it actually consumed through out the year Box 4: Waste Sort Results. Top graph is total compostables per day collected in Reeve Union (median = 16 lbs/day). Lower graph is contamination as a percent of total waste collected in the Beast containers (median = 29%). The gap in March is Spring Break week. Contacts: Ashley Kraus: Mike Lizotte: