Researchers track 3,000 pieces of Seattle
trash
By PHUONG LE,
Associated Press Writer Phuong Le, Associated Press Writer ñ
09/14/2009
(SEATTLE) Where does
that coffee cup, disposable razor or unwanted television end up once
it's tossed to the curb?
Using an electronic
tracking device about the size of a matchbook, MIT researchers are
tagging about 3,000 pieces of Seattle trash to get people thinking
about what they throw away and where it ends up.
"Seeing where
your trash goes allows you to change your behavior," said Assaf
Biderman, associate director of MIT's SENSEable City lab and a project
leader. "Will you refill a cup instead of throwing away a
disposable one?"
Researchers are
visiting the homes of hundreds of Seattle volunteers to affix
electronic tags on about 10 to 15 pieces of their household trash,
such as pizza boxes, Styrofoam cups, slippers and scrap metal. The
volunteers will dispose of the item as they normally
would.
The battery-operated
smart tags rely on cell phone technology to send information back to
MIT computers, allowing researchers ó and the public ó to monitor
the trash in real-time as it moves through the waste stream to its
final destination.
The public will be
able to follow the trash migration at an exhibit that opens at
Seattle's Central Library Sept. 18.
Jennifer Giltrop of
Seattle said she's curious to see what happens to the empty wine
bottle, a used printer cartridge and a plastic bag that she recently
had tagged.
"We know where
we purchase our items from, but we're not always as aware of what
happens when we throw things away," said Giltrop, 38, who is
assistant director of Seattle's main library. "We're aware of
recycling, but what's the process?"
Biderman said the
project will allow researchers to study in detail how efficiently, or
inefficiently, the waste removal system works.
Does recycling end
up being recycled rather than in the landfill? Does it take weeks
rather than hours or days for trash picked up from one Seattle
neighborhood to get to the transfer station?
"We're
definitely a throwaway society that sets it and forgets it," said
Brett Stav, planning and development specialist with Seattle Public
Utilities. "A lot of people forget about what happens to the
things that they throw away and they don't really factor in their
impact."
In Seattle, about
789,608 tons of waste is discarded each year. About half of that ends
up in the landfill, while the rest is recycled, reused or
composted.
But about two-thirds
of the city's garbage that ends up in the landfill, including food and
yard waste, can be recycled, according to the latest figures from
2006.
"We're
interested in improving our collection system," Stav said, noting
the city collects garbage from 150,000 homes on different routes five
days a week.
Trash is taken to
two city transfer stations before being loaded onto a train to a
landfill in Arlington, Ore. The city may find out that some routes
take longer than others, Stav said.
Biderman said
Seattle was chosen because of its reputation for recycling and its
advanced waste disposal system.
Seattle now recycles
about 50 percent of its overall waste, compared with 38 percent five
years ago. The city hopes to recycle 60 percent of its waste by 2012.
The national recycling rate is about 32 percent.
Pete Keller, general
manager for Allied Waste, said about four percent of the recycling
they pick up from Seattle and surrounding cities can't be recycled.
This includes everything from bowling balls and kitchen knives to
half-filled jars of peanut butter and engine parts, he
said.
Once workers sort
through the recycling, they sell it to domestic and some foreign
markets. Soda cans are made back into aluminum products, and cardboard
turned back into boxes, paper and packaging materials, Keller
said.