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Gastropod

Black Gold: The Future of Food...We Throw Away

Gastropod

Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley

Science, Arts, History, Food

4.73.7K Ratings

🗓️ 5 April 2022

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For a few weeks in 1987, trash was temporarily headline news: a barge filled with waste that would no longer fit in New York City's overflowing landfills spent months wandering up and down the East Coast with nowhere to dump its smelly, rotting cargo. The trash barge's travels triggered a long overdue public rethink of the wisdom of sending all of our waste to landfills—including food. But fast forward more than thirty years, and food still takes up more space in American landfills than anything else. About 30 to 40 percent of food produced in the US gets thrown away, rather than eaten. What's more, putting all that rotting food inside landfills produces a lot of methane, a powerful greenhouse gas. Our ancestors knew exactly what to do with food waste; the earliest descriptions of composting were written on clay tablets more than 4,000 years ago. So why didn't the GarBarge kick off a composting craze? And why is it so hard for us to keep food waste out of landfills? This episode, Gastropod visits the future of food waste: the high-tech facilities as well as the innovative policies that promise to keep our discarded food out of landfills, keep methane from escaping into the atmosphere, *and* turn those food scraps into something useful. Can a state the size of California really keep 75 percent of its food waste out of landfills, as it has pledged to do by 2025—and what will happen if it does? Listen in for compost blow-dryers, fruit-sticker bingo, and a lot of microbes! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

For millions of Californians all around the state, 2022 will be the year that forever

0:06.8

changes how we deal with waste.

0:09.6

Here's banana peel, here's a couple of orange, here's some eggshells.

0:18.9

Starting January 1st, a new law across California will require every person and business to

0:24.9

recycle all of their organic material.

0:28.0

So wait and make sure the things we waste don't go to waste.

0:32.1

This is really the kick in the seat of the pants that we needed as a community, as a region,

0:37.6

to build the infrastructure.

0:39.3

I'm Brian White from Newsy.

0:42.6

I live in the Golden State of California and so I woke up on January 1st, 2022 to a whole

0:48.9

bunch of headlines like this about how everything was about to change.

0:53.1

There were all these brand new rules about throwing away food scraps and everyone was about

0:57.6

to be kicked in the rear end.

0:59.5

Millions of Californians, like hundreds of millions of Americans, toss all their apple

1:03.7

cores and moldy lettuce from the back of the fridge straight into the garbage.

1:07.9

So why is that a problem and what will California and maybe all the rest of us soon be doing

1:12.4

instead?

1:13.4

That's exactly what we're digging into, this episode of Gastropod, the podcast that

1:17.2

looks at food through the lens of science and history.

1:20.2

I'm Nicola Twilly.

1:21.3

And I'm Cynthia Graber and this episode we're exploring something that Nicky and I both

1:25.3

happen to be kind of obsessed with and that's compost.

...

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