Energy & Resources Group University of California─Berkeley 345 Giannini Hall Berkeley, California 94720, United States.
Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley, California 94720, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2024 May 28;58(21):9031-9039. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.3c10711. Epub 2024 May 16.
Contemporary resource management is doubly burdened by high rates of organic material disposal in landfills, generating potent greenhouse gases (GHG), and globally degraded soils, which threaten future food security. Expansion of composting can provide a resilient alternative, by avoiding landfill GHG emissions, returning valuable nutrients to the soil to ensure continued agricultural production, and sequestering carbon while supporting local communities. Recognizing this opportunity, California has set ambitious organics diversion targets in the Short-Lived Climate Pollutant Law (SB1383) which will require significant increases (5 to 8 million tonnes per year) in organic material processing capacity. This paper develops a spatial optimization model to consider how to handle this flow of additional material while achieving myriad social and ecological benefits through compost production. We consider community-based and on-farm facilities alongside centralized, large-scale infrastructure to explore decentralized and diversified alternative futures of composting infrastructure in the state of California. We find using a diversity of facilities would provide opportunity for cost savings while achieving significant emissions reductions of approximately 3.4 ± 1 MMT COe and demonstrate that it is possible to incorporate community protection into compost infrastructure planning while meeting economic and environmental objectives.
当代资源管理面临双重负担,一方面是大量有机物质需要在垃圾填埋场进行处理,这会产生大量温室气体(GHG),另一方面是全球土壤退化,这威胁到未来的粮食安全。堆肥的扩展可以提供一种有弹性的替代方案,通过避免垃圾填埋场 GHG 排放,将有价值的营养物质返回土壤,以确保持续的农业生产,并在支持当地社区的同时固碳。认识到这一机会,加利福尼亚州在《短期气候污染物法》(SB1383)中设定了雄心勃勃的有机物质转移目标,这将要求有机物质处理能力大幅增加(每年增加 500 万至 800 万吨)。本文开发了一个空间优化模型,以考虑如何处理这一额外物质的流动,同时通过堆肥生产实现众多社会和生态效益。我们考虑了社区和农场设施,以及集中的大型基础设施,以探索加利福尼亚州堆肥基础设施的分散和多样化替代未来。我们发现,使用多种设施将提供节省成本的机会,同时减少约 340 万吨二氧化碳当量的排放,并证明在满足经济和环境目标的同时,将社区保护纳入堆肥基础设施规划是可行的。