Take Action Home >

Make Composting as Common as Trash Pick-Up!

14,883 signatures toward our 30,000 Goal

49.61% Complete

Sponsor: The Rainforest Site

Tell the EPA to mandate collection of compostable materials across the U.S.A.!


Organic material like food scraps are currently piling up in America's landfills, rotting and producing methane, a greenhouse gas 25 times more powerful than carbon dioxide1.

Landfills are the third-largest source of methane in the U.S., behind industry and agriculture2.

It doesn't have to be this way, though.

Across the country, cities have taken the initiative to implement mandatory composting and are experiencing environmental and economic benefits3. Composting puts organic material to good use, as composing produces nutrient-rich fertilizer instead of generating methane. This can help stop or even reverse the fact that one-third of the world's arable land has been lost to soil erosion. A nation-wide system consisting of many small, local or regional operations would also help create sustainable, eco-friendly jobs across the country4.

Composting isn't just a question of leaving table scraps separate for garbage collectors, however. In the United States, 71% of composting facilities are dedicated only to yard trimmings, unprepared to handle even food waste. Lack of funding has halted much of the progress made in the 1990s towards the creation or expansion of more composting facilities5.

This has to change if a national composting program is to become a reality.

In 1976, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) was put in charge of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act which governs the disposal of solid and hazardous waste in the United States6. Over the years, this important piece of legislation has seen many changes.

It's time for a new amendment.

We need the leadership of the EPA to tackle the proper management of compostable organic material.

Sign the petition below and call on the EPA to amend the 1976 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act to include composting of food scraps and other compostable materials and to collaborate with state and local governments to address the severe lack of funding and composting facilities equipped to receive and process food waste.

More on this issue:

  1. United States Environmental Protection Agency (7 October 2021), "Basic Information about Landfill Gas."
  2. United States Environmental Protection Agency (30 June 2021), "Importance of Methane."
  3. Grow Ensemble (2021), "The 15 Benefits of Composting for the Environment, the Economy, & Our Communities."
  4. The Weather Channel (21 December 2015), "Earth Has Lost a Third of Its Farmable Land in Last 40 Years, Researchers Say."
  5. Nora Goldstein, BioCycle (4 January 2019), "Food Waste Composting Infrastructure In The U.S.."
  6. United States Environmental Protection Agency (28 September 2021), "Summary of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act."
To Top

The Petition:

To the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency,

New York's former mayor, Michael Bloomberg, has called composting the city's "final recycling frontier." I am writing to ask that you use your position of power and authority to create a new program for composting food waste on a national scale.

To help sustain our planet, we simply cannot afford to continue throwing away our food scraps. As you are probably aware, as food rots in landfills, it creates dangerous methane gas, a greenhouse gas 25 times more powerful than carbon dioxide. According to the EPA, landfills are the third-largest source of methane in the U.S., behind industry and agriculture.

Across the country, cities have taken the initiative to implement mandatory composting and are experiencing environmental and economic benefits. Composting puts organic material to good use, as composing produces nutrient-rich fertilizer instead of generating methane. This can help stop or even reverse the fact that one-third of the world's arable land has been lost to soil erosion. A nation-wide system consisting of many small, local or regional operations would also help create sustainable, eco-friendly jobs across the country.

Operations like these have proven large-scale composting operations can and do work.

Composting isn't just a question of leaving table scraps separate for garbage collectors, however. Currently, the United States, 71% of composting facilities are dedicated only to yard trimmings, infrastructure inadequate and unprepared to handle food waste. Lack of funding has halted much of the progress made in the 1990s towards the creation or expansion of more composting facilities, and this has to change if a national composting program is to become a reality.

Please, amend the 1976 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act to include mandatory composting collection of food scraps and other compostable materials and collaborate with state and local governments to address the severe lack of funding and composting facilities equipped to receive and process food waste.

The United States needs the leadership and vision of the EPA to tackle the proper management of compostable organic material. It can be done. Indeed, for the health of our country and planet, it must be done.

Sincerely,

To Top

Signatures: