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What California’s organics recycling law could mean for the future of landfills

Editor’s note: This is the sixth in a multipart series exploring the market effects of California’s sweeping organic waste reduction law, SB 1383.

What would waste industry business models look like if landfills were no longer the dominant materials management infrastructure? California’s new organics recycling law might be giving the first indications.

While California doesn’t have an imminent issue with disposal capacity like some states, growing awareness about how landfills contribute to climate change has added greater urgency to the implementation of SB 1383. Landfills have been categorized by CalEPA as the state’s second-largest category source of methane emissions, and the largest single point-source emitters in the state, at a time when methane’s potency is getting more attention on the world stage.

Public and private sector waste professionals often say landfills aren’t their preferred destination for many types of material. At the same time, low disposal tip fees in multiple regions of the U.S. are often raised as a comparison when deciding if its cost-effective to provide organics recycling service.

Policy requirements, such as California’s mandate to reduce organic waste disposal 75% by 2025, are seen as one way to change that equation. Now, landfill owners in the state are working to pivot their operating models. The collection approaches that private sector operators offer are evolving as well.

Implications for landfills

CalRecycle says the goal of SB 1383 is to reduce the volume of landfill-bound organics, but it’s too soon to know if the law will reduce the need to approve future landfill expansions, or how quickly it could make a difference in how much volume landfills are seeing.

Earlier this year, CalRecycle Director Rachel Machi Wagoner said between this law and other work on curbside recycling, she doesn’t foresee a need to permit any new landfills in the state. Ideally, she said, the state would not permit any further expansions either.

“It should be going the other direction,” said Wagoner. “That is not going to be a good business model, I don’t think, going into the future.”

The nation’s most populous state has long grappled with the role of landfills, including research reports during the 1990s that sought to confirm how much capacity was remaining on a county level. Based on 1993 statistics, consultants for the state estimated that California could have as much as 28 years of capacity remaining at the time. Per capita waste generation rates and overall disposal volumes have both increased since then, though recycling volumes have also grown significantly.

While CalRecycle hasn’t published recent projections on landfill space, data collected by Waste Business Journal estimates that California’s landfills have at least 26 years of average remaining permitted capacity. The data also shows that public entities are the primary owners of landfills in the state, with an estimated 55% of capacity under their ownership.

It’s generally accepted that even with the full success of SB 1383 there will still be a need for disposal assets to handle other materials. Still, maximizing organics reduction and diversion could go a long way toward lengthening those lifespans. This expectation has already shifted priorities for multiple jurisdictions.

Man in safety gear and hat checks the temperature of a compost pile

Testing compost at an OCWR site

Permission granted by OC Waste & Recycling

Orange County, the self-described home to some of California’s largest landfills, is a prime example. OC Waste & Recycling, a public agency that runs three landfills but no collection operations, began pivoting its operations to also include three compost sites starting around 2017. SB 1383 was one factor, as was another law (AB 1594) prohibiting the use of green waste as alternative daily cover.

“It’s been a transition in what we do as far as an agency, but also the mindset. Really it was all about push, spread, cover, protecting public health and the environment,” said Tom Koutroulis, director of OCWR. “Landfills are a finite resource. Our business model is to fill up and close. We go from being an asset to a liability.”

Following recent permit updates, OCWR’s landfills are clear to operate until 2036, 2053 and 2102 respectively. But the agency anticipates notable volume reductions as SB 1383 kicks in, along with revenue shifts. 

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