Maryland
Related: About this forumMaryland landfills pose bigger climate problem than previously thought.
'Throwing food away is more than wasteful. When it gets buried in a landfill, it generates methane, a climate-warming greenhouse gas many times more potent than carbon dioxide.
A new report by the nonprofit Environmental Integrity Project finds that Marylands municipal landfills are releasing much more methane than previously estimated.
The group estimates that rotting food and other waste in Marylands municipal landfills sent about 51,500 tons of methane into the atmosphere in 2017, the most recent year for which complete data were available. That was four times the 12,500 tons that had been estimated by the state Department of the Environment.
This shows that Maryland really needs to do a better job of reducing, controlling and measuring greenhouse gases from landfills, said Ryan Maher, an attorney with the group and lead author of the report. We need to reduce our food waste, compost more and impose strong new air quality regulations that require improved methane controls systems at our states landfills.'>>>
https://www.bayjournal.com/news/climate_change/maryland-landfills-pose-bigger-climate-problem-than-previously-thought/article_98a3214e-ce9d-11eb-a6d4-7f1de9f4b318.html?
OAITW r.2.0
(29,236 posts)back in the 60's we occasionally went to the dump to get rid of stuff. Mountains of pushed up trash, open fires, all kinds of chemicals and rotting whatever. Rats were friendly, too.
Most improved landfills seem to understand the need to vent the methane gas. I see lots of upside down "J" PVC vents to address this issue. But, why not develop a system to harvest/capture the gas and turn it into electrical energy?
I am seeing lots of landfill's are being repurposed to include solar panel farms. So the juice provided, in part, from solar, can create more energy burning these waste gases. A symbiotic approach to electrical energy development.
OAITW r.2.0
(29,236 posts)Could you repost in environment and energy Group? I'g hope to see more discussion on this. I would copy over my response as well.
TIA / OAITW
OAITW r.2.0
(29,236 posts)Backatcha