Progress and Data

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Waste Management at UI

In 2010, the University of Iowa set a goal to foster a culture oriented to reducing waste, increasing recycling, facilitating composting of organic waste, and enhancing green purchasing practices to achieve a goal of 60% waste diversion by 2020.  Below is our progress towards that goal.

Reducing Waste:

Waste reduction is the highest priority in the waste hierarchy, followed by reuse.  Waste prevention results in the most benefits for the UI, from avoiding purchasing and disposal costs, to preventing the negative enviromental and social impacts associated with the extraction, processing, manufacturing, transportation, consumption, and disposal of those products.  Though this is not an exhaustive list, below are examples of waste reduction and reuse practices that have been implemented at UI:

  • Transition from paper to electronic forms and documents to reduce paper consumption  Waste Hierarchy
  • Transition from desktop printers to shared network printers to reduce paper and ink consumption
  • Default network printers to print double-sided 
  • Utilization of meal forcasting software to prevent overproduction of food in dining facilities
  • Dehydration of food waste collected for composting to reduce water weight of food waste
  • Installation of water bottle refill stations to reduce plastic bottle consumption
  • Establishment of a pallet reuse contract to collect and reuse pallets left on campus from deliveries of supplies
  • Implementation of trayless dining to reduce food waste (temporarily discontinued due to COVID-19)
  • Adoption of the Tiny Trash program for new and renovated spaces to reduce plastic trash liner usage
  • Elimination of classroom trash cans to reduce plastic trash liner consumption
  • Installation of hand driers in restrooms to reduce paper towel consumption

Increasing Recycling:

The UI has increased its recycling rate from 23% in 2010 to 36% in 2020.

Facilitating Composting of Organic Waste:

The UI diverts over 14 times more organic waste for composting and biodigestion than it did in 2010.  Primarily through the installation of food pulpers in major dining facilities (including UIHC), the UI increased organics collection from 65,000 pounds in 2010 to 1.2 million pounds in 2019 and 957,000 pounds in 2020.

Enhancing Green Purchasing Practices:

Achieve 60% Waste Diversion by 2020:

Based on available data, in 2010, the UI diverted 23% of its waste from the landfill.  In 2020, the UI achieved a diversion rate of 36%.  It should be noted that the 2010 and 2020 data do not include several types of waste generated on campus due to the difficulty of optaining weight data for these waste streams, including but not limited to, construction and demolition waste, Surplus property, and yard waste (tree trimmings, grass, leaves).

Additionally, waste diversion rates do not account for waste reduction or reuse initiatives which prevent waste from being generated in the first place. 

It is important to understand the limitation of diversion rates as the single measure towards waste goals.  The example below illustrates how waste reduction efforts can be diminished by the diversion rate metric.

  • If we recycled 1000 pounds of paper and landfilled 1000 pounds of garbage, our diversion rate would be 50 percent (Diversion%=[1000 lbs/2000 lbs]x100).  If we reduced our paper usage by half (avoiding 500 pounds of paper consumption) and continued to recycled the remaining half (500 pounds), while still landfilling 1000 pound of garbage, our diversion rate would drop to 33 percent (Diversion%=[500 lb/1500 lbs]x100).  While it's true that if you can measure how much waste is being reduced as a result of a specific initiative, it's possible to include that data in the waste diversion metric, however, in most cases waste reduction data is not readily available.  For example, over the last decade, beverage companies have been lightweighting their plastic beverage bottles to reduce the amount of plastic used in each bottle.  It is impossible for the UI to measure how much lightweighting has contributed to waste reduction on the UI campus.

Waste Audits                                      


A waste audit is an event where the contents of a building's waste is examined in order to understand what's being thrown away and what the potential is for reduction, reuse, or diversion.

By performing waste audits, we have learned that our original goal of 60% waste diversion was not reasonably achievable.  Base on our waste stream profile, which include UI Health Care facilities, the maximum achievable campus-wide diversion rate would be 61% (assuming every single recyclable and compostable material could be captured).  This is largely due to the limitations in recyclability of health care waste, which accounts for approximately half of all campus waste.


 

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