Philly is back with its greenwashing initiative, touting in-sink food waste disposals (aka garbage disposals) as a sustainable solution and requiring them in all new residential construction.
According to a press release:
Philadelphia is tackling the challenge of diverting household food scraps from its trash by requiring in-sink food waste disposers (aka garbage disposals) to be installed in all new residential construction. The building code amendment was adopted by the City Council on December 3, 2015, and signed into law by former Mayor Michael Nutter on December 23 – it took effect on January 1.
The problem with this campaign? Composting is way more sustainable. The process actually puts many vital nutrients back into the ground, and can overall reduce the amount of fertilizers and chemicals in our ground. (AKA you’re eating less pesticides when farmers use organic compost.)
Lucky for you guys, we actually called this greenwashing almost 4 years ago with Nutter’s / Streets Department’s “the Dirt Factory” campaign. Plus, this isn’t great for water: the average household uses 700 gallons per year JUST to push food down the drain with a garbage disposal.
Shocker (also from the press release): “The project was led by the Streets Department’s recycling division, supported by the Philadelphia Water Department and InSinkErator, the world’s leading manufacturer of food waste processing systems.” Corporate influence over sustainable solutions?
Just to clarify: garbage disposals are better than food scraps in a landfill. But the good ol’ fashion way, composting – is the king of them all.
Plus, Philly has FREE composting programs available. If only they can expand it to residential food scraps besides the Dirt Factory…
The awarded project was a part of the 2024 Community Voices Fund grant recipients, with $800,000…
Catch up on the latest sustainability news. Shapiro administration announces grant funding for hundreds of…
Zero Fare’s success highlights the importance of free public transit for underserved communities. For many…
Catch up on the latest sustainability news. October was exceptionally hot and dry. The average…
In our latest Civic Catalysts column, Rep Rabb talks nerding out about cool science, vertical…
Discover native trees, urban ecology, and vibrant community engagement at Philadelphia’s newly acclaimed arboreal landmark.…