What's New!
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
S.F. composts 1 million tons via curbside collection program
Call to compost all scraps from Thanksgiving, biggest food week of the year
Press event 10:30 a.m. Tues., Nov. 22 at Scoma's restaurant, Fisherman's Wharf
SAN FRANCISCO: City residents and businesses will reach a milestone today in their efforts to help protect the environment - 1 million tons composted. One million tons of food scraps and plants collected and composted since we started the green bin program in 1996; enough to fill the TransAmerica building more than 16 times!
Call to compost all scraps from Thanksgiving, biggest food week of the year
Press event 10:30 a.m. Tues., Nov. 22 at Scoma's restaurant, Fisherman's Wharf
SAN FRANCISCO: City residents and businesses will reach a milestone today in their efforts to help protect the environment - 1 million tons composted. One million tons of food scraps and plants collected and composted since we started the green bin program in 1996; enough to fill the TransAmerica building more than 16 times!
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What's New!
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
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Recology joins government and industry leaders as member of The Climate Registry
Recology to expand measurement and management of carbon emissionsSAN FRANCISCO - Recology announced today that it has joined The Climate Registry, the leading voluntary greenhouse gas (GHG) registry in North America. A nonprofit group governed by states, provinces and tribes, The Registry helps organizations measure and reduce their GHG emissions.
"Recology is demonstrating true environmental leadership by committing to report their carbon emissions in a public, transparent and credible way," said Doug Scott, Chair of The Climate Registry and Chairman of the Illinois Commerce Commission. "Measuring your emissions is the critical first step to managing them and fostering new ways to reduce your carbon footprint - and your impact on the planet."
"Since 2006 Recology has tracked, reported and verified its carbon emissions through the California Climate Action Registry," said Chris Choate, Vice President of Sustainability at Recology. "By joining The Climate Registry, Recology has expanded its leadership to further minimize carbon emissions in all its operating regions: California, Oregon and Nevada."
Recology is an integrated resource recovery and landfill diversion company that provides collection, recycling, compost and disposal services to homes and businesses in the Western United States. The name Recology reflects the company's leadership in the growth of the resource recovery industry.
"We are expanding our services and products, increasing our value to current and potential customers and working to win new contracts and form new partnerships throughout the nation," said Mike Sangiacomo, President & Chief Executive Officer of Recology.
Headquartered in San Francisco, Recology companies coordinate dozens of recycling programs to recover a variety of materials. The recycling and composting programs promoted by the company have been replicated by many cities and universities in the country and serve as national models for resource recovery initiatives.
WASTE ZERO is the company's rallying cry to make the best and highest use of all resources.
"We commend Recology for taking action to manage their carbon and energy responsibly," said Denise Sheehan, The Registry's Executive Director. "They will be able to build on their efforts by joining our community of more than 430 leading organizations from across North America who are committed to sharing best practices and reducing their carbon footprints in a meaningful way."
About The Climate Registry The Climate Registry is a non-profit organization that operates the only voluntary carbon footprint registry in North America supported by states, provinces, territories and tribes. The Climate Registry helps hundreds of public and private organizations measure, report and reduce their GHG emissions with integrity.
For more information please visit www.theclimateregistry.org.
Contact:
Alex Carr
(778) 340 8837
Robert Reed
(415) 606-9183
What's New!
Friday, July 1, 2011
Send less to landfill - BYOC
What's the latest way to be green? BYOC, bring your own containers when picking up take-out food.
Let's stop generating leftover food containers, such as Styrofoam and plastic clamshells, that are soiled with old food. People find it difficult to scrap food residue off single-use containers. If not recycled or composted, the flimsy food boxes that held last week's chicken chow mein or half-eaten enchiladas end up in landfills.
What's the latest way to be green? BYOC, bring your own containers when picking up take-out food.
Let's stop generating leftover food containers, such as Styrofoam and plastic clamshells, that are soiled with old food. People find it difficult to scrap food residue off single-use containers. If not recycled or composted, the flimsy food boxes that held last week's chicken chow mein or half-eaten enchiladas end up in landfills.
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Other News Releases
| S.F. Trash Fleet |
| San Francisco residents and businesses have placed more than 907,000 tons of food scraps and plants in green bins since the program started as a pilot in 1996. Recology, the garbage and recycling company based in San Francisco, collects those tons separately from other waste and composts the scraps and plants producing 95,000 cubic yards of finished compost a year. |
| More recycling trucks than garbage trucks San Francisco's garbage and recycling collection companies operate more recycling than garbage trucks. The combined fleet of Sunset Scavenger and Golden Gate Disposal & Recycling includes 321 collection trucks, 174 recycling, 147 garbage. All run on alternative fuel. |
| Effective Tuesday, April 22, 2008 (Earth Day) the curbside recycling program will expand to include all "rigid" (stiff) plastics. Residents and businesses will be encouraged to recycle all plastic tubs and lids, yogurt and clamshell containers (clean, without food or liquids), cups, buckets, plant containers, and other non-film plastics. |
| Our entire fleet of collection and transfer trucks, more than 385 vehicles, runs on alternative fuel. The garbage companies serving the city actively test and use alternatives to conventional fuels. In 2001 we built the first liquefied natural gas fueling station in the Bay Area. We use LNG, a cryogenic fuel, in five collection trucks and in eight transfer trucks. |
| Artist in Residence Program |
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Cross a recycling company with a classical composer and what do you get? A symphony written at the San Francisco dump played on musical instruments made from garbage. Classical musicians play saws, pipes, mixing bowls, bottles, pans, deck railings, oil drums, bike wheels, bird cages, and shopping carts to produce Junkestra, an original score in three movements. |
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The 31-year-old artist aims to create pieces that give people "a moment of wonderment before you turn back into a grownup." The public is invited this Friday and Saturday to check out pieces Gould created while working as the artist in residence at SF Recycling & Disposal, Inc. |
You can view these uncommon pieces at "The Art of Recycling Returns," an exhibit in the lobby of the Mills Building at 220 Montgomery Street in the heart of the city's Financial District. The exhibit includes 52 works by 20 artists who participated in the Artist in Residence program at SF Recycling & Disposal, the city dump. |
PDAs, wireless headsets and HD TVs make us more efficient and link us to information and entertainment. By design, the latest and greatest electronics give us direct access to work, play and each other. As the high-tech industry puts the finishing touches on another product-launch January, two artists in San Francisco are highlighting the less glamorous side of our modern obsession with digital devices - electronic waste. |
Compost |
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SAN FRANCISCO: New data shows that in addition to returning nutrients to local farms and vineyards, San Francisco's compost collection program offsets hundreds of thousands of tons of CO2 emissions, thereby helping lead efforts to reduce the Bay Area's carbon footprint. |
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SAN FRANCISCO: New data released today shows that in addition to returning nutrients to local farms and vineyards, San Francisco's compost collection program offsets hundreds of thousands of tons of CO2 emissions, thereby helping lead efforts to reduce the Bay Area's carbon footprint. |
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Growers ask people in cities to send food scraps from holiday meals back to farms SAN FRANCISCO: Officials and local farmers announced today that city residents and businesses have composted more than 620,000 tons of material, mostly food scraps, through the city's green cart program. |
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The Third Annual Great Compost Giveaway is a "bring your own bucket" event providing 5 to 10 gallons of nutrient-rich compost free to residents. The finished compost, a custom blend made from food scraps collected from restaurants and homes in San Francisco, is a great planting mix for home gardens and container plants. |
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The Organics Annex, a one-of-a-kind building in San Francisco, will open at 10 a.m. Thursday. Inside, food scraps and yard trimmings collected by route trucks will be transferred to long-haul trucks headed to Bay Area compost facilities. |
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Crews managed by Mulehead Growers and Cline Cellars operated three different spreaders on Wednesday, December 20, 2006 on vineyards at 1590 Stage Gulch Road in Sonoma County. |
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Between Sept. 1 and Dec. 1, 2006 area vineyards received and applied more than 450 truckloads (16,000 cubic yards) of compost made with food scraps collected from San Francisco and Oakland restaurants. |
The compost, made from a diverse feedstock of kitchen trimmings and plate scrapings, returns nutrients to vineyards and farms, stimulates microbial activity and improves soil structure. |
Corporate News |
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San Francisco, Calif. - April 27, 2009 - Norcal Waste Systems announced today that it formally changed its corporate name to Recology™. The name change is rooted in the company's 89-year heritage as one of the nation's first urban recyclers. Recology, with clear roots in words like recycling, renewal, reuse and reduction, signals that the company will be leading the evolution of the industry-eliminating waste from the vocabulary of consumer and industry alike. |






