New York City is home to more than 8 million people, far more than any other city in the U.S. It also produces the most waste of any city—more than 14 million tons a year! That’s about 3,300 pounds of trash per person.
My regular trash (everything that isn’t recycled) is eventually dumped in a landfill. But the last landfill in New York City closed in 2001. So the trash now must be sent elsewhere.
That process starts when my garbage is picked up by one of more than 2,000 trucks run by the New York City Department of Sanitation. The truck takes my trash to a transfer station in another part of Brooklyn. From there, my trash is dumped onto a barge, or large boat, and taken to a facility in New Jersey (see “Garbage On the Go,” below). It is then loaded onto a train. It goes either to Fairport, New York, or to Waverly, Virginia. Either way, the destination is a landfill more than 300 miles from my home.
Much of the trash in landfills won’t decompose, or break down, for many years. For example, some experts say a plastic trash bag may take 1,000 years to decompose.
When garbage rots, it releases a gas called methane. Too much methane in the atmosphere can be bad for the environment. The landfills where my trash goes have systems for capturing most of that gas. At the Fairport landfill, the captured gas is converted into energy that helps power more than 10,000 homes.