As 聽of July 18, Coca Cola of Northern New England officially stopped sending any trash to the landfill at all. Last year, the bottler鈥檚 plant in Londonderry produced about eight dumpsters worth of trash, a drastic reduction from the five dumpsters per month that the facility would have been throwing away without its recycling programs. But, thanks to the company鈥檚 new contract with Casella Waste, those remaining dumpsters will go to a waste-to-energy plant in Haverhill, Mass. instead of to the landfill.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know any other warehousing facility around here that鈥檚 like that,鈥 said Ray Dube, sustainability manager for CCNNE. 鈥淚 do so much speaking at other companies, this is such a great thing to talk about.鈥
The new contract is the final step in creating a zero-landfill facility, accompanying other waste-reduction and environmentally friendly policies long used by the bottling plant.
These other policies include attempting to recycle every possible material, sharing ideas with other businesses, installing full LED lighting and altering truck routes to make them more efficient.
Dube said this focus on efficiency has been part of CCNNE鈥檚 company culture for 40 years.
鈥淲e鈥檝e always been that way,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat drives us to do this stuff? A lot of it is financial. It has to make financial sense to do this.鈥
But Dube said the 鈥渂ig picture鈥 also included environmental considerations, adding, 鈥淟et鈥檚 face it, we all live in the same neighborhood as you guys do.鈥
Market for Recyclables
But waste-to-energy facilities like the one in Haverhill are not without controversy, and New Hampshire has faced enduring debate about the environmental impacts of the waste-to-energy process.
According to Michael Wimsatt, director of the NH Department of Environmental Services鈥 Waste Management Division, critics are most often concerned about the facilities鈥 emissions and the higher concentration of metals found in the ash that must be landfilled after burning that trash.
However, that landfill doesn鈥檛 create large amounts of methane, a potent greenhouse gas, the same way a regular landfill does. Extra precautions like multiple liners are also put in place to prevent an ash-filled landfill from failing, Wimsatt said.
鈥淭he [Solid Waste Management Act] says we should have an integrated method of waste management,鈥 said Wimsatt. 鈥淎ll of these technologies have their place.鈥
Dube also said that given the small amount of trash CCNNE produces, the waste-to-energy plant is the better option.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e burning recyclables, then no, [waste-to-energy plants] are not environmentally friendly,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut if your recycling programs are in place, I feel it鈥檚 a better way to dispose of that last bit than landfilling it.鈥
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