Tag Archives: new york city

Your Compost Will Not Attract Vermin, Take Over Your Apartment or Produce Toxic Fumes

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Environmentally conscientious New Yorkers will soon be able to compost their organic food scraps without walking 20 minutes to the nearest Green Market or tending to a bucket of worms to create their own homegrown soil. Last week, Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that he’s implementing a food composting program in the city. Like regular garbage and recyclables, the city will offer curbside pick-up of compostable food scraps such as banana peels, coffee grinds and wilted veggies.

Not everyone is on board, however. Some New Yorkers cite a fear of hypothetical vermin. The New York Post, for example, reports:

Skeptical city residents say Mayor Bloomberg’s new food-waste-recycling program is a great idea — if you’re a rat.

“Recycling, in general, takes a lot of effort,” said Geneva Jeanniton, 22, a hairstylist from East Flatbush, Brooklyn.

“People have to be willing to do it. We might not have room for compost inside. It’s difficult to make space for, and pests are definitely a concern.”

Of course, those organic scraps currently wind up in the garbage anyway. The New York Post doesn’t explain why they would be more likely to attract vermin stored on a separate container rather than in the trash bin. And while it’s true that following environmental regulations can be annoying, that’s not exactly a reason to discount them. Most would likely agree that the Clean Water and Air Acts, for example, were a good thing.

Space is another complaint that comes up, but compost advocates say it’s also a flimsy excuse. Even the most crowded New York apartment is garunteed to have space for a small bag of scraps, whether in the freezer, under a sink, in the back of a closet or on top of the shelves. Rebecca Louie, aka the Compostess, is a certified composter who helps New Yorkers deal with their greatest fears about composting (as in, producing their own compost rather than just putting their scraps out on the curb for the city to conveniently deal with). Most of people’s worries, she told Edible Magazine, are completely unfounded in reality:

“Whether you have a penthouse or a studio, I will find a space in your space where you can start doing this,” she says.

[She] calmly alleviates her clients’ fears about odors (save for the occasional “gentle onion breeze,” composting done right only produces perfumes of “beautiful earth”) and cockroaches (they can’t invade so long as the bin is properly sealed).

“Things can be done to prevent whatever people’s greatest fears are,” she says. “Like a personal trainer or accountant, I know that every client has his or her own schedule, set of needs, concerns and degree to which they want to engage with their compost system.”

Meanwhile, a research team raised eyebrows with results showing that a number of fungal species, including some that could be harmful to humans, turn up in compost made of rice, sugar cane and coffee, mixed with livestock poop. Of course, unless you’re mixing livestock poop in with your lunch, this study doesn’t really apply to NYC composters. That doesn’t stop some from worrying though. Here’s Inkfish:

Although the composts De Gannes studied weren’t quite what New Yorkers would be collecting in their kitchens—unless they’re keeping pet sheep too—some of the potentially dangerous fungi she found have also turned up in studies of all-plant compost.

Keeping a compost bucket in an enclosed space is “potentially risky,” Hickey and De Gannes wrote in an email. Fungal spores floating on the air can cause infections, especially in people with weakened immune systems. “Compost kept in an enclosed area like a small apartment would probably not have adequate ventilation.”

What Inkfish doesn’t mention is that these fungal samples were collected after the compost sat around for 82 days – a bit longer than the week or less that it will take the city to come collect your scraps.

So far, the thousands of people who already create their own compost in enclosed apartments do not seem to have fallen victim to a bout of eye and lung infections. And the residents of the cities of San Francisco and Portland, where compost pick up has long been offered by the city, haven’t complained much.

And if you’re really paranoid about fungus you’ve got some options. Simply freezing the scraps can alleviate any fears of fungal attack, and compost bins can also be installed alongside buildings’ garbage and recycling containers in the basement or on the curb, as they are on the West coast.

Plus, composting has some environmental benefits to consider: when organic matter decays in tightly packed, oxygen-poor landfills, it releases methane, a greenhouse gas around 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Every day, New York produces around 12,000 tons of organic waste. Is putting a bag of wilted lettuce into a compost pick-up bin next to your garbage really so much to ask?

More from Smithsonian.com:

Turning Fallen Leaves into Dinner Plates
Corn Plastic to the Rescue

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Your Compost Will Not Attract Vermin, Take Over Your Apartment or Produce Toxic Fumes

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A Clear View of Alaska

And maybe our future. NASA Alaska, it so happens, is pretty big. If you take Alaska and subtract Texas, the amount left over is still bigger than Texas. Given that, plus the usual atmospheric conditions, it’s pretty rare to get a picture of the nearly the entire state free of clouds. But that’s just what NASA’s Terra satellite saw on Monday: What an amazing shot! The snow-covered mountains in the southeast really stand out, and you can see a forest fire raging farther to the west. I know we’re seeing a huge swath of land, so the scale is huge—the picture shows an area about 1,500 kilometers (900 miles) across—but it’s still striking not to see any real signs of human activity here. To keep reading, click here. View original post here: A Clear View of Alaska Related Articles Al Gore says Obama Must Veto ‘Atrocity’ of Keystone XL Tar Sands Pipeline Occupy Sandy, Once Welcomed, Now Questioned Are Fungus-Farming Ants the Key to Better Biofuel?

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A Clear View of Alaska

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Thousands engage in Morocco, the beach is not a garbage can

Locals gather in Morocco and clean 4 tons of garbage from a beach. Read this article:   Thousands engage in Morocco, the beach is not a garbage can ; ;Related ArticlesSurfrider’s Beach ManifestoSurfrider Argentina picks up momentumNearly half the rice sold in Guangzhou (pop. 12+ million) is contaminated by cadmium ;

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Thousands engage in Morocco, the beach is not a garbage can

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Climate Change Will Drive Up Manhattan’s Heat-Related Death Toll

Climate change-related deaths may be even worse than these researchers are projecting. Washington Square Park, by marccappelletti/Flickr Despite the modern advances of central air and cooling centers, record-hot weather still regularly kills people all over the world. A 2010 heat wave in Russia was blamed for killingabout 55,000 people. An earlier one, in 2003, claimed 70,000 across Europe. And an infamously scorching stretch of the summer of 1995 in Chicago killed about 750. Climate change brings with it the threat that such natural disasters could happen more often, with higher death tolls, as late spring and early fall start to feel more like summer, and as summer itself gets worse. Cities are particularly vulnerable, given the urban heat island effect (we also know that certain neighborhoods within most cities are at particularly grave risk). Temperatures around New York City, for example, increased by about 2 degrees Celsius between 1901 and 2000 – a rate that was higher than the national average. Exactly how bad the heat waves will get will depend on some uncertain factors, like how fast global populations rise and how successful we are at curbing greenhouse gasses. But researchers at Columbia University’s Earth Institute and the Mailman School of Public Health have at least attempted to come up with some estimates. In new research published in the journal Nature Climate Change, they downscale future temperature projections for the island of Manhattan using 16 climate models under two scenarios (one assumes rapid global population growth and scant attempts to limit emissions; the other assumes slower growth and technological advances that slow emissions by 2040). In all 32 scenarios, compared to a baseline set in the 1980s, heat-related deaths in Manhattan go up, in some cases by as much as 90 percent by the year 2080. And these projections take into account that there will be fewer cold-related deaths from climate change. The net effect, though, still looks gruesome. The biggest jump in deaths, these models suggest, will come from “the months surrounding summer,” those stretches of May and September that we seldom associate today with heat waves. The chart at left, from the paper, shows the percent change in heat-related deaths, averaged across 16 models, in the 2080s relative to the 1980s. All of those summertime deaths also clearly wipe out any any positive changes in the wintertime death toll. The reality in the future may be even worse than these researchers are projecting. This study doesn’t take into account changes in demographics, and New York City (along with the rest of the country) will age in the coming decades. The study also doesn’t consider how air quality may worsen with climate change. But then again, we never know what technology (and health care) may bring us in the next 70 years. These early projections, though, should be enough to get us thinking now about how to get ready. Link to article: Climate Change Will Drive Up Manhattan’s Heat-Related Death Toll ; ;Related ArticlesOklahoma Tornado: Is Climate Change to Blame?Dot Earth Blog: A Survival Plan for America’s Tornado Danger ZoneVIDEO: The Secret Life of Trolls ;

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Climate Change Will Drive Up Manhattan’s Heat-Related Death Toll

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My Lucky Stroke

A lucky stroke reveals big gaps in how our health care system diagnoses and treats the country’s biggest source of disability. Follow this link:  My Lucky Stroke ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: My Lucky StrokeDot Earth Blog: More on a Sensitive Climate QuestionMore on a Sensitive Climate Question ;

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My Lucky Stroke

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Rowing 500 days on the open ocean by yourself, the Roz Savage podcast

I wanted to know what pushed Roz to do the things she does, so I pressed record and asked her. More:  Rowing 500 days on the open ocean by yourself, the Roz Savage podcast Related ArticlesJack and Coke, no straw pleaseThe best ocean ads you’ll ever seeMiami Beach chapter leader, surfer and meteorologist shares perspective on beaches

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Rowing 500 days on the open ocean by yourself, the Roz Savage podcast

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Jack and Coke, no straw please

The Miami chapter gets creative with Spring Breakers. Link to original:   Jack and Coke, no straw please Related ArticlesThe best ocean ads you’ll ever seeMiami Beach chapter leader, surfer and meteorologist shares perspective on beachesThis is and is not what a beach should look like

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Jack and Coke, no straw please

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