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November 1, 2024
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What Happens to Our Waste?

Stanford’s waste is sorted into three main waste streams: recycle, compost, and landfill. But what happens after you properly dispose of your waste?

Once items are properly sorted, custodians collect and dispose of the material in corresponding dumpsters. Stanford’s contracted waste hauler collects and transfers the material to one of three facilities to increase diversion and ensure the best use of materials. 

Recycling

Sorted, sold, and remade into new products

Stanford’s recyclables and construction material are sent to GreenWaste’s Material Recovery Facility, a local, award-winning facility in San Jose, California, that uses robotics, optical separation, and other technological advancements to achieve higher diversion rates and reduce the amount going to landfill.

People and machines sorting at the GreenWaste San Jose Material Recovery Facility

Stanford’s recyclables have an increased value and secured place in the recycling market due to low contamination rates. On average 87% of recyclables coming from campus are classified as Grade 1, defined as having contamination of 10% or less.

Recycling relies on end markets, which means a company must be interested in using recycled material to manufacture its products. Purchasing items made with recycled material bolsters the recycling system.

Compost

Feeds animals and rejuvenates soil

Sorting food scraps and other compostable material into compost bins is one of the easiest actions you can take on a daily basis to combat climate change. Compostable material from office buildings, residence halls, cafes, and public compost bins is sent to Republic Services’ Newby Island Compost Facility in Milpitas, California. Over the course of 90-180 days, the compostable material breaks down into compost, a nutrient-dense soil amendment, sold for use in gardens and on farms. Compost provides nutrients back to the soil, improving plant growth, reducing the need for synthetic fertilizers, conserving water, and sequestering carbon. 

Students reaching hands into a large pile of compost
Stanford students with compost from Republic Services’ Newby Island Compost Facility

When markets allow, food-rich material from dining halls is sent to Sustainable Alternative Feed Enterprises (SAFE), where it is turned into animal feed. 

Used cooking oil from dining halls – roughly 7,000 gallons a year – is converted to biodiesel, a renewable alternative to diesel fuel.

Landfill

If all else fails, materials are disposed.

Despite efforts to reduce, recycle, and compost as much as possible, there are still items that belong in the landfill bin, such as chips bags, snack wrappers, gloves, and plastic utensils. Once you place an item into a landfill bin, your hand is the last to ever touch it. Contents destined for the landfill are not sorted; they are sent to Republic Services’ Newby Island Landfill in Milpitas, California. 

Once items arrive at the landfill they are compacted down. This compaction prevents organic material from breaking down, which causes methane to be released. Methane is a climate super pollutant and is 84 times more potent than carbon dioxide. In California, landfills are responsible for 20% of the state’s methane emissions. Senate Bill 1383, California’s Short-Lived Climate Pollutant Reduction Strategy, aims to reduce methane emissions from landfills by increasing access to composting statewide. 

Stanford tree mascot in front of three waste bins

Divert waste from the landfill by using our waste sorting tools.

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