I think that might be the trick – the report also says: Of all solid waste received at VA
facilities, 66.77% was MSW, 16.54% was C/D/D waste, and the remainder was other
types of waste. So, if Virginia is counting 66% of it’s waste as “municipal”, then
perhaps it is defined differently than Wisconsin’s is. Or New Mexico. Or Colorado. Or…. Here’s the site for the full report if anyone’s interested: http://www.deq.state.va.us/waste/waste.html
John, does the trash-generating public in Wisconsin know that statistic? It seems to me they might get
discouraged if their best recycling efforts would only affect 20% of the
problem. Or, are you focusing your
reduction efforts on the other 80%? Terri -----Original
Message----- The
other part of the question is what's included or not included in the waste
generation rates. Here in Wisconsin, household waste is somewhere around 20% of
waste generation; commercial and industrial process waste is the other 80 some
percent. John Reindl Dane
County, WI -----Original
Message----- Hi all, We don’t have very good data collection in Eric Eric Lombardi Executive Director EcoCycle, Inc Boulder, CO www.ecocycle.org 303-444-6634 -----Original Message----- I
can't give any clues to what is happening in VA, but it is good to know, or at
least suspect that New Mexico is not the only state posting numbers over 8
pounds per person per day. Helen
Spiegelman wrote: At
11:27 AM 04/10/2002 -0400, Terri quoted: VA's
population in 2000 was 7,078,515, working out to a waste generation rate of
2.45 tons per capita, or 13.4 pounds per day. According to the report 2/3 of
this was MSW, amounting to 8.85 pounds per day. Compare this to the national
average percapita generation of municipal solid waste in 1997 reported by EPA
(Characterization update) of 4.44 pounds per person per day. Please check my
numbers. If they're right, does anyone have any ideas about this? Helen.
|