Author Archives: GretaBligh

Surprise! Looks like 2016 is going to be the hottest year in history.

The European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service has announced that 2016 will be the warmest year in recorded history — by a lot.

The Arctic had an especially warm year, and experienced the sharpest rise in temperatures, while Africa and Asia also felt unusually high temps. Globally, surface temperatures climbed to an average 58.6 degrees F, 2.3 degrees F higher than before the Industrial Revolution, when humans got serious about burning fossil fuels.

The warming temps continue a well-established trend: Last year was also the hottest year on record at the time, and 2014 was the hottest year on record before that. In fact, 10 of the hottest years on record have occurred since 1998.

This warming trend has name — it’s called climate change, if you weren’t aware — and these rapidly accelerating temperatures come with severe consequences, including worsening storms, wildfires, droughts, and other extreme weather events. And climate change isn’t just scary — it’s expensive.

Despite all the evidence, the incoming president and much of the GOP-controlled Congress either ignore climate change or thinks it’s a giant ruse created by Al Gore. As for how they explain another hottest year of record — well, maybe it’s the just heat from the burning dumpster fire that was 2016.

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Surprise! Looks like 2016 is going to be the hottest year in history.

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Move over, landfills — food scraps give Massachusetts biogas

Trash Talk

Move over, landfills — food scraps give Massachusetts biogas

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The state of Massachusetts is cracking down on food waste in a big way. Come Oct 1, any institution producing more than a ton of leftovers a week — think grocery stores, hotels, universities, nursing homes, and the like — won’t be able to send their discarded food to the landfill anymore. Their only options: donate any usable food, ship the remaining scraps to a composting facility or as farm animal feed, or turn the food waste into clean energy at an anaerobic digestion facility, where microbes in enclosed chambers break it down. The resulting biogas can then be used to create heat and electricity, or converted to compressed natural gas to fuel buses and trucks.

Some 1,700 business are set to be affected by the ban — part of the state’s ultimate plan to reduce its waste stream 30 percent by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050. NPR reports:

What’s driving this policy? Landfills aren’t very environmentally or financially attractive anymore. They generate greenhouse gases, and space is getting increasingly limited – and costly — as they start to reach capacity.

According to the Department of Environmental Protection’s most recent data, Massachusetts disposed of 4.9 million tons of solid waste in 2011, with food waste making up about 17 percent, or about 830,000 tons.

Vermont and Connecticut enacted similar bans, but they’re limited in scope compared to Massachusetts. Either way, New England is institutionalizing something we’ve always known: Landfills are just so passé.


Source
Mass. To Make Big Food Wasters Lose The Landfill, NPR

Madeleine Thomas is a Grist fellow. Follow her on Twitter.

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Move over, landfills — food scraps give Massachusetts biogas

Posted in Anchor, ATTRA, FF, G & F, GE, LG, Mop, ONA, Ultima, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Move over, landfills — food scraps give Massachusetts biogas