Approved by curator
Added: Aug 30, 2021
Last edited: Dec 28, 2023
São Paulo, together with the Climate and Clean Air Coalition (CCAC) and the International Solid Waste Association (ISWA), developed a strategy for organic waste diversion including collection, treatment and recycling. In particular, the strategy involves the distribution and training for the use of home-composters, and the expansion of separate collection of organic waste linked to existing recycling capacity.
In 2016, in São Paulo's organic waste accounted for up to 6300 tons/day. Hence, the daily amount of organic waste per capita was about 560g or 51% of total municipal solid waste production. Most of this waste ends up in landfill.
By developing a strategy in line with the Sao Paulo’s Plan for Integrated Management of Solid Waste, São Paulo aims at increasing the amount of diverted organic waste from disposal and reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from their treatment. Organic waste will be seperately collected depending on origin and matter type (e.g. household, market or commercial, etc) and brought to the appropriate scale sites for composting. This could either be a community composting site, or a small or large scale composting plant.
The resulting fertilizers from the plant will be used for things like agriculture purposes, thus giving the former waste a second life, one of which could be benefitting the production of more food. This composting strategy will have targets on the organic waste collection, treatment and recycling, starting from 2014 to 2033.
Photo by Del Barrett on Unsplash
Stretch the lifetime
Use waste as a resource
Valorise waste streams - open loop
Using open loop recycled materials
Government programmes
Rethink
Eliminate linear incentives and set goals and incentives for circularity
Design and regulate for separation and recovery
🍏 Separate organic waste collection infrastructure
🍏 Phase out landfilling of organic waste
organic waste
waste reduction
composting
waste diversion