Can We Make Plastic Sustainable?
The Debate: The New Toxic Substances Control Act Is Now Five Years Old: A Report

Plastics show up in almost every part of our economy, from medicine to transportation to water infrastructure. But the material’s benefits have come at a great environmental cost. Each year, close to 10 million tons of plastic is released into the oceans. The United States, which produced more plastic waste than any other country in 2016, only recycles about 9 percent of its plastic. Meanwhile, plastic production is projected to double by 2040.

Recent efforts have called greater attention to this issue. In November, EPA released its first-ever National Recycling Strategy to address key hurdles in the domestic recycling system for plastics and other materials. The following month, a congressionally mandated report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine called for a national strategy to reduce ocean plastic waste.

Reducing plastic pollution will require lowering resource consumption and creating a closed loop system for recycling. It will also require plastics that aren’t harmful to human and ecological health. Can we get there?

We ask experts from a range of backgrounds: Can we have the benefits offered by plastic without the harms to the environment and human health? What practices or policies should we prioritize to reduce plastic pollution? And how can abating plastic waste help address climate, sustainability, and environmental justice concerns?

The many benefits of plastic have come at a great environmental cost. In November, EPA released its first-ever National Recycling Strategy to address key hurdles in the domestic system for plastics, and the National Academies have called for a national strategy to reduce ocean plastic waste. Reducing plastic pollution will require lowering resource consumption and creating a closed loop system for recycling. It will also require plastics that aren’t harmful to human and ecological health.

State and Local Efforts to Divert Organic Waste Steadily Advance
Author
Linda K. Breggin - Environmental Law Institute
Environmental Law Institute
Current Issue
Issue
1
Linda Breggin

Over a dozen states and localities have enacted laws aimed at diverting food waste and other organic materials from landfills. Food waste is typically the largest component of landfill waste, 20 percent on average. The magnitude of the waste — roughly 80 billion pounds per year — isn’t surprising given that Americans toss up to 40 percent of their food. And, over 95 percent of food waste ends up in landfills. State and local diversion requirements not only aim to address the deleterious environmental, social justice, and cost impacts of this voluminous waste, but also seek to realize a range of benefits.

States and localities often adopt diversion measures as part of broader waste reduction and climate mitigation goals. For example, key California diversion measures are embedded in a state law on short-lived climate pollutant reductions, including fugitive methane emissions from landfills. In addition, according to New York City’s Department of Sanitation, diverting organic waste from landfills “to produce soil enhancing compost, or as an energy source through aerobic and anaerobic digesters, is a key component of the city’s goal of sending zero waste to landfills.”

Cities and states cite a range of additional benefits, including Austin’s goal to “increase the life of local landfills”—which can avoid negative externalities and environmental justice concerns associated with siting new landfills.

States and cities also point to the economic development benefits of organic waste diversion requirements. According to a Massachusetts study, the benefits of its law include new jobs in the organics processing, food recovery, and hauler sectors.

Although recycling of food scraps is environmentally preferable to landfill disposal, EPA’s food recovery hierarchy instead prioritizes waste prevention followed by surplus food rescue. States and localities do not typically identify food waste prevention as an explicit diversion goal — but several do include source reduction as a potential compliance measure, including Maryland. Several laws, however, such as those enacted in California and New York, are specifically intended as a means to reduce food insecurity by recovering edible food. According to the Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation, the results can be significant — in the two years following the state’s diversion requirement for large food scrap generators, the Vermont Food Bank reported a 40 percent surge in donations.

Food waste diversion laws take a variety of approaches with respect to substantive requirements, entities covered, and implementation timelines. Some focus on mandating composting or anaerobic digestion and outline compliance measures that typically include both on-site and off-site options. These laws frequently provide exceptions for generators that are not located near a processing facility — which is defined by Rhode Island as 15 miles, for example, but by Maryland as 30 miles. Other states and localities are more expansive and mandate or list additional compliance activities that can include reducing food waste, donating surplus food, feeding animals, and providing for industrial uses.

Some states and localities, including Seattle as well as Vermont, impose diversion requirements on all types of businesses. But many laws focus primarily on firms that generate food waste, including food wholesalers, manufacturers, and retailers. Others cast a wider net, including Massachusetts, which covers governmental entities, and Rhode Island, which regulates educational institutions. Several states and localities consider not only the type of business in determining the entities subject to diversion requirements, but also the amount of food scraps generated and, in some cases, the square footage of businesses.

Although households are responsible for roughly 40 percent of wasted food, at the state level most laws do not apply to them — with certain exceptions, such as Vermont and California. As early as 2009, however, San Francisco required “all persons” to separate compostables and participate in composting programs. And, since 2015, Seattle has prohibited food waste in household garbage. Both cities offer curbside pickup of organics.

Most states and localities phase in their diversion requirements to afford businesses time to prepare and to allow for development of the food scrap recycling infrastructure necessary to recycle the diverted waste. As a result, even an early adopter, such as Vermont, only completed its ban on land-filling food waste in 2020 — six years after its law was enacted. Other states, such as Maryland, which only recently enacted its law, have yet to start implementation.

Although organics diversion requirements take time to implement fully, the uptick in state and local mandates is likely to continue, as such laws provide an effective means of tackling critical waste management and climate mitigation challenges.

State and Local Efforts to Divert Organic Waste Steadily Advance

ELI Report
Author
Akielly Hu - Environmental Law Institute
Environmental Law Institute
Current Issue
Issue
6

Environmental Liability Using civil lawsuits to protect biodiversity and expand the policy toolkit for conservation

The harmful exploitation of resources — including illegal wildlife trade, fishing, and logging — is one of the top two factors devastating global biodiversity and driving species to extinction. It damages rural livelihoods, robs countries of badly needed revenues, and undermines conservation efforts.

Most countries rely on criminal and administrative enforcement to counter illegal wildlife trade. While these responses can impose fines and imprisonment, they are not focused on remedying the environmental harm.

An international group of conservationists, lawyers, and economists, including ELI Visiting Scholar Carol Adaire Jones and ELI Vice President for Programs and Publications John Pendergrass, is now advocating for the use of environmental liability suits to counter the illegal exploitation of resources and protect biodiversity. Unlike criminal and administrative procedures, these suits can hold responsible parties liable for remedying the harm they have caused, through actions including habitat restoration, species protection, public apologies, and education.

Funded by the U.K. Government’s Illegal Wildlife Trade Challenge Fund and led by Jacob Phelps of Lancaster University, the team advocates that conservation liability suits be used strategically against defendants involved in illegal wildlife trade with the financial means to provide remedies. These include corporations and organized crime groups who are held accountable for restorative actions, typically as a complement to criminal prosecution.

In addition to publishing a paper in Conservation Letters, the team released a guide, Pioneering Civil Lawsuits for Harm to Threatened Species: A Guide to Claims With Examples From Indonesia, which is intended to inform NGOs, government officials, prosecutors, academics, and judges.

Prior ELI research highlighted that laws providing a legal right to remedy for a wide range of environmental harms are already in place in many biodiversity hotspots, including Brazil, China, Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, Mexico, and more. However, these laws are seldom used for a number of reasons. In some cases, governance challenges such as corruption may be a factor. Other impediments include a lack of awareness of the law and a dearth of implementing guidance. In particular, one of the problems cited is difficulty in valuing the damages.

To address this issue, the guide builds on what is called the restoration-based approach for valuing claims. This method values damages based on the cost of restoration projects to remedy the harm to biodiversity and compensate for losses incurred until the resources recover, rather than placing a value on the harm done. Following the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill and the subsequent passage of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, the approach was pioneered in the regulations written to implement the OPA, for which ELI's Jones served as lead economist.

In the United States, the restoration-based approach to valuing damage claims — which has been widely adopted for other liability statutes — has been shown to expedite the restoration of resources after a case is resolved. This approach is also more readily transferable to developing countries than putting a dollar value on the harm.

The report guides practitioners and academics through key concepts and procedures for environmental liability lawsuits, including seeking, presenting, and executing legal remedies. The guide, journal article, and related policy resources can be found at conservation-litigation.org.

Cities can reduce food waste through climate action planning

Cities across the country have pledged to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and develop climate action plans that outline the steps they will take to achieve these goals. However, most existing plans contain few, if any, food waste-related actions. A report by ELI in partnership with the Nashville Food Waste Initiative, A Toolkit for Incorporating Food Waste in Municipal Climate Action Plans, provides model provisions for addressing food waste in local planning, enabling cities to reduce both food waste and greenhouse gas emissions simultaneously.

Climate action plans offer an ideal opportunity for cities to address food waste, a major — yet often overlooked — contributor to climate change. In 2019, 35 percent of food in the United States went unsold or uneaten, leaving a greenhouse gas footprint equal to 4 percent of U.S. emissions. Research by Project Drawdown has identified reducing food waste as one of the top three most impactful solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emissions worldwide.

Addressing food waste also garners many benefits beyond climate change mitigation. Reducing wasted food alleviates food insecurity, conserves natural resources, and saves money by decreasing food purchasing and waste disposal costs.

The toolkit provides a menu of options that includes measures to prevent food waste, rescue surplus food, and recycle food scraps. It is intended to facilitate the widespread adoption of food waste provisions in local climate action and sustainability plans by truncating the time and effort that would be required if a municipality had to start from scratch.

In addition to providing model provisions, the toolkit includes links to example provisions in existing sustainability plans. Strategies and approaches highlighted in the toolkit include policies and ordinances, public awareness and education, incentives and funding, leadership and recognition initiatives, and environmental justice-related efforts.

Nature-based solutions minimize the impacts of disasters

Natural disasters pose a huge risk to people, ecosystems, and property — a risk that will only increase with climate change. One solution is to invest in nature-based hazard mitigation strategies, also referred to as natural or green infrastructure. These actions conserve or restore nature, such as wetlands and floodplains, or use green infrastructure projects like rain gardens, all to minimize the negative impacts of natural disasters.

Nature-based solutions can offer a more cost-effective alternative to “gray” infrastructure, which also increases habitat and biodiversity. Recently, a growing number of funding opportunities through the Federal Emergency Management Agency aim to encourage such strategies. However, to date relatively few nature-based projects have been funded with available grants.

Government entities can develop a strong foundation to apply for this funding by including nature-based strategies in their hazard mitigation plans. These plans are required of states, tribes, and locales for certain kinds of disaster mitigation funding, including grants from FEMA. Plans identify natural hazard risks to communities, create goals for hazard mitigation, and outline actions to address risks.

This spring, ELI released Nature-Based Mitigation Goals and Actions in State and Tribal Hazard Mitigation Plans, a study evaluating to what extent plans are incorporating nature-based goals and actions. Based on a review of all 50 states’ mitigation plans and a small subset of tribal plans, the report identifies a range of practices across jurisdictions, and analyzes areas for improvements in developing nature-based strategies. The study also includes specific plan language that could be used by governments in the future.

In tandem, ELI published an accompanying report, Nature-Based Mitigation Goals and Actions in Local Mitigation Plans, based on an analysis of over 100 local hazard mitigation plans. Both reports identify a number of paths to greater use of nature-based strategies. Although many plans include nature-based goals and actions, government entities can focus on planning for realistic prioritization of these projects. Funding, implementing, and monitoring these projects are also important next steps. Among other recommendations, more demonstration projects, including assessing outcomes with data and monitoring, can also exemplify the benefits of nature-based projects and encourage others to follow suit.

Using Liability Lawsuits to Protect Biodiversity.

Circular Economy and Global Governance
Author
James Pennington - World Economic Forum
World Economic Forum
Current Issue
Issue
5
Parent Article

Only 20 percent of global electronic waste is recycled. At the same time, the International Energy Agency predicts that to get to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 we’ll need six times more mineral inputs by 2040 than we use today. One of the biggest stocks of these resources is in our old electronics. Current practices often mean these minerals are going to waste.

To effectively meet this demand for minerals, we need to put in place a system that can take back used equipment for repair and recycling. Doing so will require running reverse supply chains at scale.

For success at closing the loop here, we need to bear in mind three things. First, the reverse supply chain system must be responsible — not putting people or the planet at risk, and absolutely no dumping on developing countries. Second, it must be economically viable — so prohibitive costs don’t slow adoption. Third, it needs to be a global enterprise — recovering many metals is a capital-intensive, specialized business with few facilities around the world.

The Basel Convention has been vital in stopping egregious e-waste dumping and providing much-needed international governance principles. However, reverse supply chains remain inefficient. From our research we have found that reverse logistics for used electronic products are between 31-190 percent more costly than outbound logistics for new products.

Over the last year the World Economic Forum worked with the World Business Council for Sustainable Development to bring together other global organizations and the biggest players in the electronics industry in a Circular Electronics Partnership. In this effort, we interviewed many companies trying to build a reverse supply chain to help create a roadmap for the next decade.

The insights revealed key areas where intervention is needed. To start, at a political level, governments must broaden their conversations and invite new voices. Discussion should expand from waste management to explore the economy-wide transformations possible with the circular economy. Ministries of trade, economy, and environment need to be at the table. The conversations also must include a full range of external stakeholders.

Efforts should also be made to connect convention conversations with broader discussion around the circular economy at the World Trade Organization. As the role of critical materials in decarbonization becomes more apparent, it is time to bring in the climate convention and the Paris Agreement. These broader dialogues could happen in capitals or other forums if not on the convention floor itself.

The prior informed consent procedure is an important process in the convention. But the system is complex, adding significant cost to legitimate shipments of waste for recycling. Given existing protocols, the process can run into the tens of thousands of dollars, with delays spanning into months or years.

More flexibility can also ensure reverse supply chains flow smoothly. Currently, the PIC procedure requires transit countries to consent to e-waste shipments. Many don’t, however, as they have very little stake in the process. Transit countries could, instead, have the ability to opt-in to block shipments. If a country does not block a shipment after notification, it should be considered that the country has given its tacit consent.

As used equipment flows often follow a path of least resistance, flows toward formal recovery facilities in developed countries should be encouraged. Green corridors could channel equipment from pre-approved collectors or processors to pre-approved and certified recovery facilities in developed countries under a trusted trader system.

As the Basel Convention goes into its 15th Convention of the Parties this year, it is a perfect moment to reflect on its numerous successes and also reimagine its position as the natural forum for global governance of the circular economy. With overall material demand predicted to double by 2050, governments need a space to be able to come together and put in place the architecture that will help us reach our collective goals.

‘The Community,’ Equity, and Justice
Author
Stephen R. Dujack - Environmental Law Institute
Akielly Hu - Environmental Law Institute
Environmental Law Institute
Environmental Law Institute
Current Issue
Issue
2

The past year has seen the emergence of the community as a key phrase in the national conversation. This is a result of the impact by the Movement for Black Lives and related movements among Latinos, Native Americans, and Asian Americans, each of which brings to attention the aspirations, along with the needs and grievances, of a group.

At the same time and not coincidentally, the term environmental justice has become part of the nation’s lexicon. This is the immediate result of a several new executive orders. But it is more importantly the result of decades of work by activists in communities wracked by pollution and neighborhood ruin.

The EJ movement elevates the concerns of affected areas — always called “the community” — to the level of the larger community. This has too often been limited to people of color and local interests. A welcoming sign is that engagement with the community at both levels has become an important task for both business and government. The big step in the last year is another enlargement of the scope of concern; hopefully, as should be true with racial justice generally, community is now the entire nation for this important cause.

Here one needs to celebrate the contributions of the civil rights movement’s founders. They turned the actions of a brave woman in refusing to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus into a local community grievance that grew into a national community movement and achieved landmark successes. A group that included a local minister, Martin Luther King Jr., along with other clergy and educators, began organizing the community. They needed to ensure that their proposed boycott would be observed, that there were cars to take workers to their jobs, that they had a bail fund. Although a suit by the NAACP officially ended the dispute, the economic effects of the community’s boycott were decisive. King thereafter spoke often of what he called “Beloved Community,” one of equality.

Notably, nowhere in the text of the Constitution or the amendments does the word “community” appear, despite invocation of “the general welfare.” Indeed, whereas the Federalists were individualists, in the estimation of historian Isaac Kramnick, it was the anti-Federalists who were “nostalgic communitarians, seeking desperately to hold onto the virtuous moral order threatened by commerce and market society.”

But that was not what the newly proposed government was all about. In Federalist No. 10, in fact, after enumerating a “manufacturing interest, a mercantile interest, a moneyed interest,” Madison goes on to state that “the regulation of these various and interfering interests forms the principal task of modern legislation.” According to Kramnick, “for Madison and the Federalists, justice effectively meant respecting private rights, especially property rights.” Indeed, in a speech to the Constitutional Convention, Madison declared that liberty depended on “divid[ing] the community” so that no group gains a majority.

But the notion of community, of sharing endeavor and goals, persisted. The 19th century was marked by utopian communities — for White people, at least. Such were the followers of Johann Georg Rapp, who founded the Harmony Society in rural Pennsylvania. The Rappites believed in a strict communism. Every day, the milk wagon went by each cabin. Into a funnel at the top of the barrel, the housewife poured from a bucket her cow’s morning production. Then she drew into the same bucket from a bung at the bottom the day’s ration to all community members. The Rappites were celibates, and put all their labor into productive manufacturing endeavors. Being successful celibates, they eventually died out. The same fate befell the Shakers, another manufacturing community in which all property was shared. Notably, both were economic success stories, speaking well for communitarian interests.

Also successful were the followers of John Humphrey Noyes, who considered themselves “Bible Communists.” They moved to western New York to set up the Oneida Community. Where the Rappites were sexless, the Oneidans had a communal marriage, based on Scripture’s injunction that “all mine thine, all thine mine.” Indeed, that applied to all property as well. In place of law or regulation, they had community sessions in which miscreants were subject to the justice of the tongue. And like the Rappites, they were industrialists. They invented the better mousetrap, the Victor Four-Ways, and made a fortune. They began the silver company that still bears their name. But eventually the children of plural marriage didn’t necessarily support it for themselves, and the community expired.

The 19th century of course also had national movements rooted in community, many of which still resonate today. Lincoln spoke often of community, and invoked the Declaration of Independence in reminding Americans that theirs was a “government of the people, by the people, and for the people,” one “dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.” The emancipation movement, the suffrage movement, the labor movement, the Populist movement, and religious sects all embraced the sense of sharing of aspirations emblematic of community.

Today, the Movement for Black Lives and its brethren, including the EJ movement, remind us of the validity, continuity, and evolution of communitarian goals. At the same time, they make clear the distance yet to be traveled. The American genius has been to continually expand the community to the point where the concerns of individuals are the concerns of all. No longer should where you live determine your quality of life, indeed your very lifespan. The community — acting as one — should no longer stand for it.

Notice & Comment is written by the editor and represents his views.

Be Eco-Aware or Be Square

I have a bottle of rubbing alcohol that is square instead of round. “Square bottle uses less plastic than a similarly sized round bottle,” its label proclaims. Dusting off memories of high school geometry, the reader might recall that out of all geometric shapes, spheres maximize the most volume for the least amount of surface area. So wouldn’t a round bottle, closer in shape to a sphere, use less plastic than a square one?

Over the course of an afternoon, I wrestled with a graphing calculator and ruler to set the record straight. According to my figures, a round bottle of equal height and volume uses 5.826 square inches less plastic than the square one. That’s nine postage stamps of plastic, or seven-tenths of a Post-It note. Multiply by a hundred thousand bottles, and you get an excess of plastic that would blanket three quarters of a basketball court.

An unsurprising finding, but some questions remain. Perhaps a round bottle requires thicker plastic material than a square one for structural integrity, or vice versa. Packing square bottles inside rectangular shipping containers might minimize dead space, which would increase shipping efficiency and save fuel — although it’s unclear if or how this would offset the extra plastic used.

Policymakers call this process of adding up direct and indirect environmental costs of a product a Life Cycle Analysis. LCAs assess the environmental impacts of the full life cycle of a given product, from extraction of raw materials, to production and use, to disposal or reuse. LCAs are used to analyze new renewable fuels under the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, and to evaluate products for Environmentally Preferred Purchasing policies for several states.

An LCA could also help us understand the environmental impacts of square vs. round bottles. However, the analysis is not without its flaws. As the economist Frank Arnold noted in this magazine, “It is impossible, practically speaking, to identify and measure all of the indirect sources of environmental problems for a given product or process.” Even if you tried, the process would end up prohibitively expensive and laborious.

Perhaps there are limits to comparing life cycle costs in the first place. After all, alternative forms of packaging can only go so far to address the issue of plastic use.

I’m reminded of a company that sells packaged water in paper cartons, promoting reduced plastic waste as part of the product’s appeal. Boxed Water Is Better, they say — and that’s also the company’s name.

Similar to our bottle of rubbing alcohol, the main advantage of these paper cartons is shipping efficiency, not reduced waste, according to one 2015 Bloomberg article. In fact, the recycling rate for the type of plastic used to make water bottles is significantly higher than the rate for cartons. At the end of the day, Boxed Water Is Better encourages consumers to feel good about a habit that contributes to enormous waste: using disposable water bottles when, in many cases, perfectly safe tap water is available.

The problem is not that we need different packaging — we need less waste and less packaging to begin with. According to EPA, packaging makes up close to thirty percent of all municipal solid waste in the United States. Shiny new alternatives like boxed water won’t make the dent they promise. We need, as Frank Arnold puts it, the simpler solution of traditional environmental regulation: “Defining a problem clearly and developing regulatory and non-regulatory mechanisms to address it.”

—Akielly Hu, Associate Editor

‘The Community,’ Equity, and Justice.

Let's Talk Trash
Author
John A. "Skip" Laitner - Economic and Human Dimensions Research Associates
Meagan A. Weiland - Economic and Human Dimensions Research Associates
Economic and Human Dimensions Research Associates
Economic and Human Dimensions Research Associates
Current Issue
Issue
5
Let's Talk Trash

As Americans we generate a lot of refuse, rubbish, runoff, garbage, trash, sewage, and effluvia of all kinds. For the most part, however, waste is a hidden problem. But hardly without impact. From a more critical perspective, waste creates an array of social, economic, and environmental consequences that will be harder and harder to avoid — unless we take preemptive actions to set targets or legislate goals that encourage a much greater scale of resource productivity, which is the root issue.

We can start to explore the many dimensions of a very big problem as we begin with perhaps the familiar metric of 4.4 pounds of municipal solid waste created each day for every inhabitant in the United States. That refers to the daily waste that is dumped into the local landfills. In 2014 that added up to just over 258 million tons. The bad news? That is only the tip of a vast waste iceberg.

In addition to the solid landfill wastes, what if we add in the dumping of energy-related greenhouse gas emissions, plus all of the hazardous and criteria air pollutants? What if we also add to the totals all the fecal matter not only from humans, but also from animals we eat? And finally, what if we include losses from soil erosion from cropland and rangeland? In that case, the total levels of waste would jump to about 280 pounds per person per day. Across the entire U.S. population, that adds up to a combined 16.6 billion tons of aggregate wastes in that year, the last one for which we have complete data.

Assessing the aggregate magnitude of waste is just one way to look at the problem. We can also explore the many unexpected ways that waste is produced every single day; and in turn, we can examine the various environmental burdens. We can then determine the lost economic opportunity arising from that waste. But a bigger question will arise when studying this issue in its full dimensions: Are we living more by waste than ingenuity?

But let’s back up a bit. . .

Unfortunately, we don’t have the time or resources to create a full accounting of what we might call the invisible burden of waste. Yet, we can still explore the likely magnitude of total wastes, and the full array of environmental and economic problems that result. And we can do this using a Fermi estimate for the year 2014. Enrico Fermi was both a theoretical and experimental physicist known for his ability to make good approximate calculations with little or no actual data.

The good news? There are reasonably suitable data from various government reports and research studies that we can tap into. At the same time, they are data that have not been previously totaled up in an aggregate way to reflect the scale of waste within the United States. So with the hope that this different perspective might lead to a more productive result, as did Fermi we are looking more for insight than precision.

With a preliminary accounting of waste in hand, we provide a “first look” investigation into the various impacts and costs of those wastes. We next generate a thought experiment of how those costs might impact or hamstring the U.S. economy. Finally, we draw some conclusions about what might be done to turn around the costs so that we might encourage a more robust and more sustainable economy in the years ahead.

For ease of convenience, tapping into a variety of available databases from the Environmental Protection Agency and the Energy Information Administration, we can start the tabulation with greenhouse gases and the criteria and hazardous air pollutants. The greenhouse gases, which contribute to the serious problem of global climate change, include energy-related carbon dioxide emissions from the combustion of fossil fuels. The six criteria pollutants regulated by the Clean Air Act include carbon monoxide, lead, ground-level ozone, particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide. Among the 187 hazardous air pollutants, also known as air toxics, are benzene (found in gasoline) and methylene chloride (used as a solvent and paint stripper by some industries). In the aggregate, these various air emissions sum up to about 6 billion tons per year.

Fecal matter from humans, cows, and pigs adds about 1.3 billion tons. That may seem more than we might otherwise imagine, but there are about 88 million cows generating perhaps 65 pounds of manure each day apiece, and about 68 million pigs producing about 13 pounds per day per animal. And there is the U.S. population of about 319 million inhabitants (in 2014) also producing about 1 pound per person per day. The math suggests, from a fecal material standpoint, we may have a population equivalent to 7 billion people. And that does not include any of the waste matter from dogs, cats, goats, sheep, poultry, and other domestic critters.

Losses from the erosion of our soils? That is also much bigger than we might imagine. According to the National Science and Technology Council, citing the latest data, for 2012, there are an estimated 1.9 billion acres of cultivated and uncultivated land in the United States. While management practices have improved erosion, we are still losing about 4.6 tons of soil per acre every year. That adds up to a total of 8.9 billion tons annually. And this accounting does not incorporate the loss of soil quality from our current pavement, landscaping, and agricultural practices.

Adding up these amounts altogether — the relatively small 258 million tons of municipal wastes, concurrently with the 6.1 billion tons of various air pollutants and emissions, the 1.3 billion tons of fecal matter, and the 8.9 billion tons of soil losses? It turns out we are now producing a minimum of 16.6 billion tons of various wastes per year. If we look at it another way, that is about 2.4 pounds of wasted matter for each dollar of personal income that we earn in the United States.

More interesting, the total of 16.6 billion tons does not include water or water losses, mining tailings, the degradation of soil quality, and the many other forms of waste at play in our economy. Indeed, those 16.6 billion tons are significantly bigger than the material footprint for the United States that researchers published in 2013. They estimate that the average American buys 50,000 pounds of raw materials annually for all the stuff we buy or use in any given year. Using the criteria for what researchers call the material footprint, clearly we are living more by waste than ingenuity.

It is not simply the huge quantities of materials that we consume, it is also the consequences that follow from the many forms of waste.

Let us first consider all the livestock manure that is dumped every single day on the many agricultural lands in the Midwest, along or near the Mississippi River. Gathering in what are euphemistically called large Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations, the wastes build up. In October 2017, there was a poisoning caused by dairy runoff in Dyersville, Iowa, in which an estimated 60,000 fish were killed along nearly seven miles of stream. Then in various ways, the feces, urine, and bacteria continue to wash away down The Big Muddy. As more and more of those wastes accumulate, they become a form of nutrient pollution, and are dumped at the mouth of the Mississippi and into the Gulf of Mexico. There they contribute to the Dead Zone, more properly the hypoxia zone, which occupies an area the size of New Jersey.

The Dead Zone is an area of low-to-no oxygen that can kill fish and other marine life. The agricultural nutrients, including manure, that flow downstream and into surface waters stimulate harmful algae. As one research study notes, although “farmers often claim a deep-seated knowledge of their land because they work it, the degree to which some farmers choose to not make the connection between how they farm and its impact on water quality is dispiriting.” But that might be said of all of us within the United States.

Even with the information technology revolution, paper is still very much a part of our everyday life. Every year, one estimate suggests, Americans use about 90 million tons of paper and paperboard. That includes more than 2 billion books, 350 million magazines, and 24 billion newspapers that are published on an annual basis.

Currently, about 64 percent of all paper products are recycled. This is the highest rate of recycling of any product. Even with this very high rate, however, paper and paperboard still make up 16 percent of all landfill space in the United States. What might not be known is that the paper and pulp industry is also the fourth highest contributor of greenhouse gases globally. It contributes to methane gas emissions from landfills all over the world. One kilogram of methane has the same heat trapping ability of 25 kilograms of carbon dioxide over a 100-year period.

Even with paper leading the way in recycling rates, the use of paper products still produces a high level of waste. Junk mail is a good example. With credit card offers, advertising specials, and other clutter, one in every five pieces of mail is considered instant trash by recipients. Over 90 percent of people say they do not even look at their junk mail before discarding.

Today, 100 million pieces of junk mail are sent out to homes each year and 44 percent of this mail will end up directly in landfills, making up 6.5 million tons of waste products entering our landfills each year. This means that junk mail alone contributes 16 percent of CO2 emissions from the paper and pulp industry every year.

As we discuss below, water is already wasted in huge amounts, and the paper industry is another example of this. It takes between 4,000 to 12,000 gallons of water to produce one ton of paper pulp. Moreover, the paper industry ranks fourth in hazardous chemical releases and ranks third in the releases of chemicals to surface water. So not only does it take a great deal of water to produce paper, the industry is also a leader in polluting the nation’s water resources.

Though they do their best to hide it from public view, American food retailers typically experience in-store losses of 43 billion pounds of food a year. Store managers routinely over order, for fear of running out of a particular product. Entire shelves of perfectly edible shell peas are transferred into dumpsters to make room for incoming peas; pallets of zucchini are rejected because they curve too much. If the affected wholesaler can’t quickly find another market nearby (a discount chain that tolerates curvy vegetables, for example, or a food bank with refrigerated space), the load will be dumped.

And there is more. The inefficient use of food is putting immense pressure on Earth’s resources. Just how much pressure? That is not well understood. When we begin thinking about it, however, we might immediately think of the food that is thrown away in our homes, or the food left behind on a large bowl or plate in a restaurant. But this, again, is just the tip of the iceberg lettuce.

Today, as much as 40 percent of all food produced in the United States goes uneaten. Indeed, one estimate suggests that, each year, 165 million tons of food is lost or wasted before it even reaches the household. Almost all food waste in the United States ends up in landfills, where it accounts for almost 25 percent of all U.S. methane emissions.

Most will quickly understand that wasting hefty amounts of food can have enormous detrimental effects, especially as the United Nations classifies two-thirds of the world’s population as “food insecure.” But the damage is not finished when food is thrown away. What is not seen are the resources wasted in the production process. An enormous amount of land, energy, water, and capital needs to be considered when calculating the full impact of wasted food. Consider some quick facts to put food wastage into perspective: four percent of all U.S. oil consumption and 25 percent of all fresh water used to grow food is for food that will go uneaten.

By one estimate, food-related packaging creates 580 pounds of CO2 emissions per person each year. If 40 percent of the food goes uneaten, then that percentage of the packaging that holds food is needlessly used. Adding up the U.S. population of 319 million people in 2014, we might attribute 37 million tons of CO2 emissions to packaging for food that is never eaten.

In addition, the food must travel. Red meat, for example, is transported as far as 13,500 miles before it reaches the consumer. That, in turn, requires fossil fuels that generate additional CO2 emissions. If Americans throw out a good portion of the meat that is purchased, then all those traveled miles are wholly wasted, even as they continue to generate additional carbon dioxide emissions.

As we already noted, water is another key resource that is unfortunately wasted at nearly every point in the food chain. By one estimate U.S. annual consumption of water is about 418,000 gallons per capita, or about 8 billion tons in the aggregate within the United States. About 70 percent of freshwater withdrawals goes to agricultural consumption and agricultural drainage. Another 24 percent goes to industrial and municipal wastewater use. With these percentages in mind, here we focus on agricultural uses to better understand water use efficiency.

The production of food or clothes takes an enormous amount of water. By one set of estimates, for example, it takes an average of 660 gallons of water to produce a single tee-shirt, and 2,000 gallons to make a single pair of jeans. However, these totals look incredibly small compared to the amount of water used to produce food.

It takes 33 gallons to produce a single apple, 42 gallons for a banana, and a whopping 634 gallons to produce a hamburger. It takes 441 gallons of water to raise, water, feed and process one pound of boneless beef and a shocking 198 gallons to produce one single ounce of chocolate. Again, thinking about that 40 percent of food produced in the United States is never eaten, we can begin to get a picture of how much water is wasted in the production and consumption of food.

Less thoroughly examined is the energy to produce all the food, paper, clothing, shelter and the many other necessities of life. If we add up all the coal, oil, natural gas, and other energy resources used within our economy, and compare them based on their corresponding heat values, it turns out that the U.S. consumes about 4.9 billion tons of coal equivalent to power our entire economy each year. But there is also a huge waste associated with the consumption of that energy.

Building on the work of Robert Ayres, Benjamin Warr, Reiner Kümmel, and others, we estimate that the U.S. economy is only about 16 percent energy-efficient. In other words, the United States has a corresponding energy waste of about 4.1 billion tons of coal. Much of that waste is found in the release of air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions already referenced.

Other aspects of waste include fly ash from the coal burned in power plants or the waste heat from driving our cars or firing up our many industrial processes. At the same time, we can use energy — and especially what we can call energy productivity — as a basis to highlight how reducing waste might strengthen the economy.

In 1950, the U.S. economy generated about $1,200 of economic activity for every ton of coal equivalent consumed in the United States (based on constant 2009 dollars). By 2014 that grew to $3,200 per ton. That’s an annual improvement of about 1.5 percent. The question here is how much more social and economic well-being might have emerged had we been able otherwise to reduce the level of waste.

Last year a United Nations International Resource Panel suggested that reducing material consumption by 30 percent from current levels of use might increase global GDP by $2 trillion by 2050. If the United States follows that same trajectory, domestic annual GDP might increase by $750 billion above current projections. In effect, energy productivity would double to about 3 percent annually — reaching an output of nearly $10,000 per ton of coal equivalent in 2009 dollars.

While a 3 percent annual rate of improvement seems like a large jump, it is a rate that we exceeded 13 times since 1970. The key is to promote the right set of policies that set targets for waste reduction and greater levels of energy productivity. Solutions come hard, but they begin by recognizing the problem before us. Whether through incentives, performance standards, or waste targets, there are any number of studies which suggest it can be done. The outcome is a stronger, more robust economy, as well as a healthier environment.

And how might we begin to elevate the performance of our economy? Three things come immediately to mind.

First, we badly need dialogue. ELI could convene a national discussion about the scale of waste that burdens both the environment and the economy. Whether food, water, materials, or energy, the inefficient use of resources weakens and makes less-resilient our social and economic well-being.

Second, the dialogue would benefit from a thoughtful review of key legislation. Yes, we have the Solid Waste Disposal Act, the Soil Conservation and Domestic Allotment Act, and the Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act, among other national legislation. But they focus more on pollution control rather than greater resource productivity and waste reduction, constraining the larger opportunity. And how can they meaningfully integrate a common national purpose like resource productivity with other legislation like the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards and the National Appliance Energy Conservation Act?

Finally, we need to develop new business models. Today’s economy and business revenues are primarily anchored to the sale of commodities such as tons of coal, steel, and paper. How can we move into new market and institutional arrangements that pull more revenues from value-added services that promote resource productivity rather than the sale of things like gasoline or electricity? And how can new technologies, including distributed electronic ledgers like blockchain, or digital enterprises like cloud computing, positively shape those business models? The opportunities are clearly there. The question is whether we will take advantage of them. TEF

Do we live more by waste than ingenuity? Americans generate a minimum of 280 pounds per person per day. Most of that is out of sight, out of mind. So solutions come hard, but they begin by recognizing the necessity.