quinta-feira, 31 de janeiro de 2019

Global Biogas Market 2019-2023 | Adoption of Integrated Waste Management System Drives Growth | Technavio

The global biogas market research report by Technavio predicts the market to post a CAGR of close to 6% during the period 2019-2023.

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The increase in the amount of methane, CO2, and other GHGs in the atmosphere results in extreme climatic conditions such as heavy rainstorms, acid rain, and severe fluctuations in temperatures globally. Fossil fuel combustion to fulfill energy demand is a critical factor that results in the emission of such GHGs. Hence, many governments are taking initiatives to prevent the release of methane into the atmosphere. Biogas energy plants offer the best solutions to reduce methane emissions as they capture methane and use it for energy generation.

As per Technavio, the integrated waste management system will have a positive impact on the market and contribute to its growth significantly over the forecast period. This global biogas market 2019-2023 research report also analyzes other important trends and market drivers that will affect market growth over 2019-2023.

This report is available at a USD 1,000 discount for a limited time only: View market snapshot before purchasing

Global biogas market: Integrated waste management system (IWMS)

The primary objective of IWMS is ensuring sustainable management and addressing the technical and governance aspects of solid waste management. IWMS will help in reducing the amount of waste dumped into landfills or burned in the open and assist in effectively utilizing the waste by capturing the energy produced. Using the waste from one industry as a raw material in another industry will also reduce environmental degradation or pollution due to proper waste management.

"Application of specific technologies to treat waste ensures efficient waste management. IWMS combines the benefits of multiple treatment technologies in one installation, and hence, it is widely adopted across the world. The voluntary adoption and subsequent benefits offered by IWMS will benefit countries by ensuring efficient waste management, thereby driving the global biogas market," says a seniorresearch analyst at Technavio.

Global biogas market: Segmentation analysis

This biogas market analysis report segments the market by source (agricultural waste, landfill, and others) and geography (the Americas, APAC, and EMEA).

The agricultural waste segment held the largest biogas market share in 2018. The processing of agricultural waste for biogas production helps in generating higher profits, and thereby provides new opportunities for plant operators. Also, the heat and electricity produced by biogas as well as the fertilizers that are a byproduct of this process have a high demand in the market. This will drive the growth of biogas installations in the agricultural segment.

EMEA accounted for the highest share of the market in 2018. The increasing demand for energy and concerns over environmental degradation along with economic development will be some of the critical factors boosting the growth of the biogas market in EMEA.

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Some of the key topics covered in the report include:

Market Landscape

  • Market ecosystem
  • Market characteristics
  • Market segmentation analysis
  • Market Sizing

  • Market definition
  • Market size and forecast
  • Five Forces Analysis

    Market Segmentation

    Geographical Segmentation

  • Regional comparison
  • Key leading countries
  • Market Drivers

    Market Challenges

    Market Trends

    Vendor Landscape

  • Vendors covered
  • Vendor classification
  • Market positioning of vendors
  • Competitive scenario
  • About Technavio

    Technavio is a leading global technology research and advisory company. Their research and analysis focuses on emerging market trends and provides actionable insights to help businesses identify market opportunities and develop effective strategies to optimize their market positions.

    With over 500 specialized analysts, Technavio's report library consists of more than 10,000 reports and counting, covering 800 technologies, spanning across 50 countries. Their client base includes enterprises of all sizes, including more than 100 Fortune 500 companies. This growing client base relies on Technavio's comprehensive coverage, extensive research, and actionable market insights to identify opportunities in existing and potential markets and assess their competitive positions within changing market scenarios.

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    View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20190130005536/en/

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    Technavio ResearchJesse MaidaMedia & Marketing ExecutiveUS: +1 844 364 1100UK: +44 203 893 3200www.technavio.com

    Copyright Business Wire 2019

    continue reading Global Biogas Market 2019-2023 | Adoption of Integrated Waste Management System Drives Growth | Technavio

    quarta-feira, 30 de janeiro de 2019

    Waste Management extends Phoenix Open sponsorship

    SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Waste Management has extended its title sponsorship of the Phoenix Open through 2030.

    The new agreement was announced by PGA Tour commissioner Jay Monahan and Waste Management president and CEO Jim Fish on Tuesday at TPC Scottsdale.

    The deal replaces a 10-year agreement that started with the 2016 tournament.

    Waste Management, the title sponsor for the past decade, has diverted 100 percent of tournament waste to recycling, composting and reusable energy since 2013.

    The Phoenix Open is the highest-attended tournament on the PGA Tour, drawing more than 500,000 fans each year.

    continue reading Waste Management extends Phoenix Open sponsorship

    terça-feira, 29 de janeiro de 2019

    2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open odds: Surprising picks from proven model that nailed four golf majors

    The 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open has a field of 132 golfers vying for a $7.1 million purse, with about $1.3 million going to the winner. The tournament is held every year on the same week as the Super Bowl and attracts a rowdy crowd that will live it up at TPC Scottsdale. The latest Phoenix weather forecast is calling for sunny skies and light winds on Thursday and Friday, giving attendees and golfers alike a reprieve from the polar vortex the rest of the country is experiencing. The latest 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open odds list Jon Rahm as the Vegas favorite at 7-1, with Justin Thomas, who's missed the cut in two of his last three starts at this event, going off at 9-1. Before locking in any 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open picks of your own, be sure to check out the latest PGA predictions from SportsLine's proven computer model.

    SportsLine's prediction model, which was built by DFS pro Mike McClure, has nailed four of the past eight majors entering the weekend and called Tiger Woods' deep run in the PGA Championship despite being a 25-1 long shot. The model has been spot-on early in the 2018-19 season. It was all over Rahm (12-1) at the 2018 Hero World Challenge, projecting him as a top contender from the start. It also correctly predicted Brooks Koepka's (9-1) victory at the 2018 CJ Cup earlier this season. Additionally, it correctly called Bryson DeChambeau's (9-1) seven-shot victory at the 2019 Omega Dubai Desert Classic. Anyone who has followed the model is up huge. 

    Now that the 2019 Phoenix Open field is locked, SportsLine simulated the event 10,000 times, and the results were surprising. One huge shocker the model is calling for: Hideki Matsuyama, a two-time champion of this event and one of the top Vegas favorites, makes a strong run, but falls short of winning the title.

    Matsuyama's three-peat bid ended early at this event last year. After winning the Phoenix Open in 2016 and '17, Matsuyama had to withdraw from last year's tournament with a left wrist injury. Although he has dominated this course in years past, he has only finished on top of the leaderboard of any tournament once since his 2017 triumph, the WGC-Bridgestone Invitational two years ago. Also, Matsuyama has finished 18th or worse in three of his past four starts on the PGA Tour. There are far better values to be had in this loaded 2019 Phoenix Open field than the premium he's commanding.

    Another surprise: Rickie Fowler, an 18-1 long shot, makes a strong run at the title. He's a target for anyone looking for a huge payday.

    Fowler has gotten off to a quick start in the 2018-19 PGA Tour season, finishing fourth at the Shriners Hospitals for Children Open. He followed that up with a solid showing at the Mayakoba Golf Classic, where he shot all four rounds in the 60's. He also finished fifth at the Hero World Challenge, an unofficial event that featured 18 of the world's elite golfers.

    Fowler's consistent play this season has him ranked in the top 20 in scoring average (70.082) and birdie average (4.92), which will allow him to move up the 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open leaderboard quickly. Plus, he's finished 11th or better in his last three starts at this event. He has a much better chance to win it all than his odds imply, so he's a target for anyone looking for a huge payday.

    Also, the model says five additional golfers with Phoenix Open odds of 18-1 or longer make a strong run at the title. Anyone who backs these underdogs could hit it big. 

    So who wins the 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open? And which long shots stun the golfing world? Check out the odds below and visit SportsLine now to see the full 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open projected leaderboard from the model that nailed the winners of four golf majors, and find out.

    Jon Rahm 7-1Justin Thomas 9-1Hideki Matsuyama 14-1Xander Schauffele 14-1Gary Woodland 18-1Rickie Fowler 18-1Webb Simpson 18-1Tony Finau 20-1Phil Mickelson 22-1Matt Kuchar 25-1Cameron Smith 28-1

    continue reading 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open odds: Surprising picks from proven model that nailed four golf majors

    segunda-feira, 28 de janeiro de 2019

    2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open field: Players, rankings

    The 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open field is set with the passing of the typical Friday entry deadline.

    The Waste Management Phoenix Open field is headlined by Justin Thomas, Jon Rahm, defending champion Gary Woodland and Xander Schauffele

    We do not yet have Monday open qualifiers for this event, played at TPC Scottsdale in Scottsdale, Arizona.

    2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open field
  • Anders Albertson
  • Byeong Hun An
  • Abraham Ancer
  • Kiradech Aphibarnrat
  • Ryan Armour
  • Aaron Baddeley
  • Sangmoon Bae
  • Daniel Berger
  • Ryan Blaum
  • Jonas Blixt
  • Keegan Bradley
  • Bronson Burgoon
  • Sam Burns
  • Bud Cauley
  • Alex Cejka
  • Cameron Champ
  • K.J. Choi
  • Stewart Cink
  • Austin Cook
  • Joel Dahmen
  • Tyler Duncan
  • Harris English
  • Tony Finau
  • Rickie Fowler
  • Brice Garnett
  • Brian Gay
  • Lucas Glover
  • Cody Gribble
  • Emiliano Grillo
  • Bill Haas
  • Chesson Hadley
  • Adam Hadwin
  • Brandon Hagy
  • James Hahn
  • Brandon Harkins
  • Brian Harman
  • Tyrrell Hatton
  • Russell Henley
  • Jim Herman
  • Charley Hoffman
  • Morgan Hoffmann
  • Tom Hoge
  • J.B. Holmes
  • Michael Hopper
  • Billy Horschel
  • Beau Hossler
  • Mackenzie Hughes
  • John Huh
  • Sungjae Im
  • Freddie Jacobson
  • Zach Johnson
  • Sung Kang
  • Martin Kaymer
  • Michael Kim
  • Si Woo Kim
  • Whee Kim
  • Chris Kirk
  • Kevin Kisner
  • Patton Kizzire
  • Colt Knost
  • Russell Knox
  • Satoshi Kodaira
  • Jason Kokrak
  • Kelly Kraft
  • Matt Kuchar
  • Martin Laird
  • Andrew Landry
  • Danny Lee
  • Luke List
  • Adam Long
  • Hunter Mahan
  • Hideki Matsuyama
  • Denny McCarthy
  • Phil Mickelson
  • Keith Mitchell
  • Ryan Moore
  • Trey Mullinax
  • Grayson Murray
  • Kevin Na
  • Joaquin Niemann
  • Alex Noren
  • Sean O'Hair
  • Carlos Ortiz
  • Ryan Palmer
  • C.T. Pan
  • Kenny Perry
  • Scott Piercy
  • J.T. Poston
  • Jr. Potter
  • Seamus Power
  • Andrew Putnam
  • Jon Rahm
  • Chez Reavie
  • Patrick Rodgers
  • Sam Ryder
  • Rory Sabbatini
  • Xander Schauffele
  • Adam Schenk
  • Ollie Schniederjans
  • Charl Schwartzel
  • Webb Simpson
  • Cameron Smith
  • Brandt Snedeker
  • J.J. Spaun
  • Scott Stallings
  • Kyle Stanley
  • Brendan Steele
  • Robert Streb
  • Kevin Streelman
  • Steve Stricker
  • Chris Stroud
  • Brian Stuard
  • Nick Taylor
  • Vaughn Taylor
  • Justin Thomas
  • Kevin Tway
  • Peter Uihlein
  • Harold Varner III
  • Jhonattan Vegas
  • Jimmy Walker
  • Nick Watney
  • Bubba Watson
  • Richy Werenski
  • Aaron Wise
  • Matthew Wolff
  • Gary Woodland
  • Chase Wright
  • Top 50 players in 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open field
  • 4. Justin Thomas
  • 6. Xander Schauffele
  • 7. Jon Rahm
  • 10. Tony Finau
  • 11. Rickie Fowler
  • 18. Bubba Watson
  • 19. Webb Simpson
  • 21. Alex Noren
  • 24. Gary Woodland
  • 28. Cameron Smith
  • 29. Tyrrell Hatton
  • 32. Keegan Bradley
  • 33. Hideki Matsuyama
  • 34. Kyle Stanley
  • 37. Billy Horschel
  • 38. Kiradech Aphibarnrat
  • 40. Kevin Kisner
  • 46. Andrew Putnam
  • 48. Brandt Snedeker
  • 49. Emiliano Grillo
  • 50. Satoshi Kodaira
  • continue reading 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open field: Players, rankings

    domingo, 27 de janeiro de 2019

    Arizona's Family guide to 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open in Scottsdale

    SCOTTSDALE, AZ (3TV/CBS 5)-- The 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open is right around the corner and it’s time to make sure you’re ready.

    The tournament runs from Jan. 28 to Feb. 3 at the TPC Scottsdale Stadium Course at 17020 North Hayden Road in Scottsdale. Here’s all you need to know about admissions, parking and how to get around.

    Ticket Prices:

    Admission is free Monday and Tuesday for everyone. Children 17 years old and younger get in free of admission all week when accompanied by an adult.

    General admission for Wednesday, Thursday and Sunday is $45 per person per day.

    General admission for Friday and Saturday is $60 per person per day.

    A weekly sponsor package costs $450 and includes 4 badges (good for the entire week) and one parking pass (also good for the entire week).

    Active duty, military reserve, National Guard, Military retirees, veterans, peave officers, firedighters and EMTs gain free admission thought the Waste Management Phoenix Open Birdies for the Brave program. Click here to get your tickets verified.

    More inclusive packages start from $3,900 and up. You can find out more about those prices by clicking here.

    Parking and Shuttle Service:

    There is free public parking in Lot H near the Loop 101 and Hayden Road. The shuttle from Lot H to tournament gates will operate on the following days and times:

  • Monday and Tuesday from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.
  • Wednesday through Saturday from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.
  • Sunday from 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
  • Free parking is also available Wednesday through Saturday at WestWorld in Lot W, which is located at 94th Street and Bell Road.

    The shuttles from Lot W will operate on the following days and times:

  • Wednesday through Saturday from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.
  • Sunday from 7 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.  
  • The shuttle service from Lot W will not operate on Monday or Tuesday. See map below:

    Click here for more information on parking and directions.

    [Related: Scottsdale Quarter offers free shuttle service to Phoenix Open]

    Where to catch a ride:

    Uber is the official rideshare partner of the Waste Management Phoenix Open, and rides can be accessed via Lot 7. See map above.

    Birds Nest:

    The Birds Nest is where to catch the action once the sun goes down. 

    On Wednesday Jan. 30, Old Dominion, Midland and Brandon Lay will get the party started. 

    The show on Jan. 31 is already sold out. It features Jake Owen, Lee Brice and Michael Ray.

    The friday night show is also sold out. The Chainsmokers will be with Snoop Dogg and Kelley James.

    Tickets for Saturday Feb. 2 are still available. Martin Garrix, DJ Vie and Justin Mylo will be performing.

    Click here for more information about the Birds Nest and to purchase tickets. 

    Time for fun!

    Now that you’re got your ticket and your ride in order, it’s time to hit the holes. Keep this site map (below) handy for information on where to access the closest beverages, restrooms and more.

    Click here for more information on rounds and concerts.

    continue reading Arizona's Family guide to 2019 Waste Management Phoenix Open in Scottsdale

    sexta-feira, 25 de janeiro de 2019

    Waste Management CEO bringing tech to trash

    Waste Management CEO Jim Fish heads a company that manages landfills, recycling centers and garbage trucks, but he'd rather talk about robots, autonomous vehicles, advanced algorithms, e-commerce and big data.

    Fish wants the largest waste removal service on the New York Stock Exchange to operate more like a tech company that happens to pick up trash, rather than a trash company that has tech.

    Since moving into the CEO position in 2016, he's driven the company at full speed toward a digital strategy with a modern, Silicon Valley-esque corporate culture. His vision is to become the kind of CEO who hires Ivy League graduates, coders and gamers and works in an open, airy and modern office space.

    Fish is a tall, clean-cut financial type who can talk earfuls about his ventures group and how it'll drive growth for shareholders. He not what potential college graduate recruits expect when he enters a room.

    "They expect this dirty trash man to come through the door," Fish said.

    But Fish is a certified accountant who started his career at KPMG. He progressed naturally from a Big Four auditing firm to a CFO and then CEO position at a Fortune 500 company, which happened to be Waste Management.

    The Houston-based company, worth nearly $40 billion on the stock market, has worked over the past two years to lay the foundation of a digital-forward strategy. Fish and his team believe innovative technology will be a major growth driver in the coming years, so they're betting big on it now.

    They met with Google to talk shop and have taken inspiration from Amazon, and they plan to move their corporate employees to a new headquarters this year to match the work space with the goal. Fish says we should envision their new headquarters more like a campus, compared with their current headquarters, filled with antique art and stuffy wood furniture in private offices at 1001 Fannin Street in downtown Houston.

    "This looks like a 1985 building," Fish said of the current space. The new headquarters will only move a few blocks away in 284,000 square feet in the Capitol Tower at 800 Capitol Street. Waste Management still likes the tax benefits and the low cost of living in Houston, though the company also considered moving to Nashville, Chicago or Denver.

    Since Fish took over Waste Management in 2016, the company's financial strategy has not changed much, according to analysts. Scott Levine, a Bloomberg Intelligence senior industry analyst, said that could be because much of Fish's pricing and corporate strategy was implemented while he was CFO.

    "He was a key architect of pricing strategy and corporate strategy, which emphasized, from 2012-forward, discipline around overhead," Levine said.

    As 2019 progresses, Waste Management executives believe they will start to see the fruition of their technology efforts in customer growth and cut costs.

    Analysts expect the company to do $458 million in adjusted net income for the fourth quarter of 2018 and the company's dividend rate for the last four quarters was 1.96 percent.

    A force in the industry, Waste Management claims a whopping 42 percent of its industry's market share in 2017 according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and analysts remain bullish.

    Its biggest domestic competition is Republic Services Inc., $23.6 billion company at the end of the third quarter of 2018. Waste Management stock price rose a little over 5 percent in 2018. Since 2016, the stock price has climbed from around $50 per share to $90. In summary: Analysts think there's a steady road ahead for shareholders.

    Futuristic fleets ahead

    Fish started his career at Waste Management in 2001 with various management positions and climbed up to the CFO position in 2012. An accounting graduate from Arizona State University with an MBA in finance from the University of Chicago, he's from Austin and has family in Denver (he lobbied a bit to move the headquarters to Colorado, but ultimately decided Houston had a more compelling case). As much of his financial strategy is already in play, Fish can afford to take the long view, starting initiatives that look 10 or 20 years down the road instead of to only the next quarter. The existing business "is very solid," Fish said.

    One of those initiatives is autonomous vehicles. The company is piloting remote-operated vehicles, like bulldozers, with Caterpillar in Denver. Instead of a driver getting out of the truck at the landfill and going to the bulldozer, young people with video game experience would be able to sit inside and move the waste remotely.

    "I was thinking my 16-year-old nephew would be really good at this," Fish laughed. "It's an easier job to hire for. One of the guys we were hiring was a Fortnite guy. So, he picked this up quickly."

    Waste Management is meeting with another company in February to talk about piloting autonomous vehicles for over the road trucking. Fish imagines that within five years they will have an autonomous truck in their fleet (if not within five years, he says at least within the decade).

    Though Republic Services uses data to plan routes and has single-operator trucks with cameras installed, Fish claims his competition isn't looking as far down the road at futuristic tech as he is when it comes to autonomous trucks and equipment. Republic Services declined to share what they are testing at this time.

    "I think they think we're nuts, which is fine," Fish said of competition in the industry.

    As easy as Amazon

    In 2017, Fish hired Nikolaj Sjoqvist to create the building blocks of a digital strategy. Sjoqvist is the chief digital officer, charged with digitizing Waste Management: not an easy task to undertake in a company that only has 5 percent of its customer interactions online or by mobile. The management team is trying to change that. Fish wants Waste Management's consumer interface to be like an airline; you never have to call them. And, Sjoqvist wants that be as easy to use as Amazon.

    "Amazon is a very complicated logistics operation, and we too are a logistics operation," Sjoqvist said. "And I think the difference is that Amazon started … with a model that absolutely puts the customer at the forefront."

    Sjoqvist envisions an online platform that allows customers to buy and pay for their trash services, see what time the truck will arrive and let the company know if they have a bulky pick up. Waste Management is in the early stages of rolling out the technology to its core customer base and he thinks 2019 will be the year customers will see material changes in the way they interact with the company.

    Within the company, they developed algorithms using data collected from their trucks to predict when parts will break. Instead of fixing a part after it breaks on a route, which is more costly, the company will begin to proactively replace parts on their trucks if they estimate it will break soon. They are also collecting data from every single truck - each of the nearly 20,000 have computers installed - to determine the most efficient route for drivers to take. Sjoqvist expects implementation of both of these initiatives within the next year or two.

    "Last year was sort of foundation-setting," Sjoqvist said, referring to the development of algorithms and data collection. "This year is further strengthening our foundation but beginning to see the fruits of our labor."

    Landfilling and recycling facing disuption

    Fish is looking 10 or 20 years down the road for solutions to what he sees as long-term problems. Landfilling is profitable right now, but quickly becoming an issue for waste companies as space runs out.

    "At some point down the road, someone will come up with a technology that replaces landfills. And I want to be that person," Fish said. "I don't want one of these young Stanford MBA students to develop that technology and put my landfills out of business overnight."

    As landfills in the U.S. come to the end of their useful life, Waste Management typically tries to expand them, but that solution won't be a reality forever. In some areas of the country, namely along the east coast, waste companies transfer trash by train and by barge to landfills further away, increasing transportation costs.

    "If I could come up with a cost-competitive alternative to landfilling then I would use that immediately," Fish said.

    Waste Management's venturing portfolio invested about $500 million in companies with promising technology that would divert wastes away from landfills, and the company scouts for new technology globally.

    The company has the cash on hand to be flexible right now. In 2014, the company did a large divestiture of its waste energy business, Wheelabrator Technologies, for almost $2 billion. At the end of the third quarter of 2018, the Waste Management had $83 million in cash on the books.

    "We have a balance sheet that can handle it," Fish said of large acquisitions. "It used to be so leveraged that even if we were interested in a big acquisition we couldn't do it because the balance sheet couldn't absorb it."

    Recycling is another challenge. Profits for recycling have plunged due to new quality controls on recycling imports implemented by China. Since the change, the price of mixed scrap paper and other recyclable materials has plunged from $75 a ton in 2017 to nearly zero. Fish said that 18 months ago, the company was shipping over 25 percent of its recyclables to China. Now, it's down to 3 percent. Research by Levine and other Bloomberg analysts show that the recycling headwind has begun to reflect on the company's finances as growth slows. The result has been increased fees on the customer for recycling and more consumer messaging on what can and cannot be recycled.

    "They will continue to diversify their exports to try to change their business to be more insulated from China in the future," said Levine, who worked on the Bloomberg analysis. "What's happened is serious enough to trigger longer-term changes in the business."

    Waste Management is testing what Fish calls a recycling plant of the future in Chicago. Right now, workers pick out items that are not recyclable from a conveyor belt. At the Chicago plant, workers (or a robot) pick out items that are. What's picked out has much less contamination, as the only time it's contaminated is if a picker picks up the wrong item. Fish thinks he'll move the company to this type of plant as older plants retire or need equipment replacements.

    Fish wants his legacy to be that he drove Waste Management to the cutting edge of trash technology, if there is one, with the talent to match. Recently, he worked with a group of Harvard students who presented ideas on how Waste Management could help with the ocean's plastics problem. He wants those same students clamoring for a job at his company the same way that they would if he was from Deloitte or McKinsey.

    "If I have a group of Harvard students who are not just looking at going to work for McKenzie or private equity, or going to work for Google, but they're thinking about an innovative company as Waste Management, that used to be thought of as just a trash company," Fish said. "That would be huge."

    erin.douglas@chron.com

    Twitter.com/erinmdouglas23

    continue reading Waste Management CEO bringing tech to trash

    quinta-feira, 24 de janeiro de 2019

    County eyes hauling waste to proposed facility in Appomattox

    As the Amherst County Board of Supervisors weighs long-term options to dispose of the county’s waste in upcoming years, officials are tuned into a company’s proposal to build a transfer station in Appomattox County.

    The board agreed at its Jan. 15 meeting to wait two months to see how County Waste of Southwest Virginia’s request for a conditional use permit to build a transfer station and recycling center on more than 34 acres next to U.S. 460 on the western edge of Appomattox County proceeds. Amherst supervisors have considered closing the county’s landfill on Kentmoor Farm Road in Madison Heights when its current cell fills out in the near future and building a transfer station at the landfill or the site of a former county landfill on Riverview Road in Madison Heights.

    The most viable option for saving the most money is hauling waste to the potential private transfer station in Appomattox five miles from the Amherst County line, pending its approval, according to Amherst County officials. 

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    “If we don’t have to build a transfer station, or we don’t have to build a new [landfill] cell, that is going to be the lowest cost option,” County Administrator Dean Rodgers said. “The only issue then is maintaining our flexibility for the future …”

    The Appomattox County Planning Commission during its Jan. 9 meeting tabled a decision on recommending to Appomattox’s board of supervisors approval or denial of County Waste’s proposal. Rodgers told Amherst supervisors he has discussed the project with Appomattox County Administrator Susan Adams and she believes it will move forward and receive a conditional use permit to operate, he said.

    If Amherst County proceeds in the direction of using that facility, Rodgers said the county would have to decide what to do with approximately $4 million it borrowed anticipating expanding the landfill or building a transfer station.

    Supervisors inquired about using the money for other solid waste projects, including a new planned convenience center on the U.S. 60 West corridor in Lowesville that cost more than anticipated. Stacey Wilkes, the county’s director of finance, said the county’s time frame for spending tax-exempt bonds is approaching in May, but as long as the money is used in the realm of solid waste disposal options it likely can be applied for other projects.

    The county has worked with Draper Aden Associates, a Lynchburg firm, in analyzing its waste disposal options and so far spent $13,500. Supervisors decided last week to hold off on spending $16,600 in additional studies as it awaits Appomattox County’s decision on the private transfer station proposal.

    “I don’t think this county needs to build a transfer station. One’s going to be built in Appomattox County,” Supervisor David Pugh said. “We could use that and 10 years down the road, if the price gets too outrageous we could look at doing something else.”

    At an Oct. 2 town hall meeting Amherst supervisors held on the landfill’s fate, several residents urged the county to hold off on a decision to see how the Appomattox project plays out.

    Supervisor Claudia Tucker asked what the county’s fallback position is if the Appomattox project were to fall through.

    Rodgers said if a transfer station doesn’t come to fruition in Appomattox County, the board could proceed with building its own station at the landfill, a 280-acre site, which has been estimated at $1.6 million, or construct one at the former landfill on Riverview Road.

    Rodgers said if the county does eventually agree to haul waste to the potential Appomattox site, another option is to install infrastructure at the current landfill or the Riverview Road property that can be added onto later if a county transfer station is necessary.

    Amherst County Board of Supervisors Chairman Jimmy Ayers said a point to consider is possible regulation restrictions the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality could place on transfer stations if the county has one built.

    “What we put in the ground may not be something that would be accepted in five to 10 years from now,” Ayers said, later adding: “Waste management is something that needs to be taken care of, and it’s a costly business.”

    A new private landfill facility approved for construction in Cumberland County also is a potential hauling site for Amherst County to consider using, consultant engineer Lynn Klappich of Draper Aden Associates has said.

    County Attorney Michael Lockaby told supervisors he thinks it’s a great idea to hold off until County Waste has “its ducks in a row” in setting up a neighboring facility to Amherst County.

    “It would be wise for us to wait,” Ayers said.  

    continue reading County eyes hauling waste to proposed facility in Appomattox

    quarta-feira, 23 de janeiro de 2019

    Private Company Successfully Demonstrates Deep Geologic Disposal of Prototype Nuclear Waste Canister

    Berkeley, CA – On Wednesday 16 January, Deep Isolation, a California-based private company, demonstrated publicly that prototype canisters built for nuclear waste can be successfully placed and retrieved thousands of feet underground. With over 40 observers from multiple countries, attendees included representatives from the U.S. Department of Energy, nuclear and oil & gas industry professionals, investors, environmentalists, and local citizens. This first-of-its kind demonstration represents a significant milestone for the nuclear waste industry.

    Deep Isolation's patented technology leverages standard drilling technology that has been perfected over the past two decades in the oil & gas industry. The approach was previously considered impossible by many nuclear experts, in part because of the challenge of retrieval. Deep Isolation had been testing their technology in private, and this was the first time that members of the public were invited to see the demonstration. No radioactive material was used in the test, and the location was not one where actual waste would be disposed.

    Participants saw first-hand the Deep Isolation prototype canister designed to hold highly radioactive nuclear waste, and were able to tour the test rig and site while the test was being conducted. Professor Scott Tinker, Director of the Bureau of Economic Geology and the State Geologist of Texas, has been following Deep Isolation's progress. "Managing nuclear waste is an important, unmet commitment to the American people. I was intrigued by this innovative approach to nuclear waste disposal", said Dr. Tinker. "The technology is adapted from the oilfield and is straightforward and time tested. The team was able to answer questions around public perception and environmental risk."

    This is the first time that such a test has ever been carried out, and demonstrates the advantages of a private-public-partnership approach. Deep Isolation's objective is to safely and securely dispose of nuclear waste faster than other options, while building consensus through genuine stakeholder engagement. Elizabeth Muller, Deep Isolation's CEO emphasized that "Stakeholder engagement is where our solution began. Meaningful consultation cannot happen once a technology has been confirmed. To prepare for this public demonstration, we met with national environmental groups, as well as local leaders, to listen to concerns, incorporate suggestions, and build our solution around their needs and our customers'."

    The canister held no waste, but a steel rod simulated the weight of true waste. The canister was lowered over 2000 feet deep in an existing drillhole using a wireline cable, and then pushed using an underground "tractor" into a long horizontal storage section. The canister was released and the tractor and cable withdrawn. Several hours later, the tractor was placed back in the hole, where it latched and retrieved the canister, bringing it back to the surface.

    Our team has worked tirelessly to reach this moment," says Rod Baltzer, Deep Isolation's Chief Operations Officer. "We have been working on canister design, drilling technology, stakeholder engagement and other aspects, and today, we were able to show people our disposal concept using a prototype canister. It was incredibly special to share this accomplishment with many of the key people who have made it possible, and with our guests who can see how this solution could benefit them, their organizations and communities."

    Dr. Richard Muller, Deep Isolation Chief Technology Officer, notes that "We have not invented new drilling technology; the oil and gas industry has already perfected directional drilling. What we are doing is using this technology for an unexpected and extremely important new application. Right now, the U.S. is holding 80,000 tons of highly radioactive nuclear waste. Something must be done with this, and every major scientific group that has studied the challenge concluded that putting it deep underground is the safest solution for the present and future generations." He further explains that the method has significant advantages over the widely considered alternative of putting the waste in mined tunnels. "A drilled repository allows you to go deeper, while disturbing less rock. It is both safer and less expensive than a mined repository", says Professor Muller.

    In 2019, Deep Isolation is focused on both the U.S. and the international market for nuclear waste disposal. According to the International Atomic Energy Agency, there are about 400 thousand tons of highly radioactive spent nuclear fuel waste temporarily stored in pools and dry casks at hundreds of sites around the world. No country has an operational geological repository for spent fuel disposal.

    About Deep IsolationBerkeley based Deep Isolation is a leading innovator in nuclear waste disposal solutions. Founded through a passion for environmental stewardship, scientific ingenuity, and American entrepreneurship, Deep Isolation's world-class team of experts has developed a patented solution using directional drilling to safely secure waste deep underground. For more information, contact info@deepisolation.com.

    continue reading Private Company Successfully Demonstrates Deep Geologic Disposal of Prototype Nuclear Waste Canister

    Hampton Roads Hauling – Waste Management of Virginia | Advancing to Achievement Level 2019, Elizabeth River Stars

    This solid waste hauling company planted a garden for pollinators in May as one more step in its commitment as a River Star.

    When the firm planted 600 native grasses and flowers plus a seed mix, it not only created habitat for butterflies and other insects but reduced the need to mow. A “no mow zone” around a stormwater pond also creates habitat and discourages geese.

    The company continues to switch its vehicle fleet to natural gas for lower emissions.

    continue reading Hampton Roads Hauling – Waste Management of Virginia | Advancing to Achievement Level 2019, Elizabeth River Stars

    terça-feira, 22 de janeiro de 2019

    Waste Management (WM) Stock Up 14.8% in 6 Months: Here's Why

    In spite of a debt-laden balance sheet, shares of Waste Management, Inc. WM have gained 14.8% in the past six months, significantly outperforming the 6.3% rise of the industry it belongs to.

     

    Catalysts Behind the Upside

    Waste Management continues to execute its core operating objectives of focused differentiation and continuous improvement, and instill price and cost discipline to achieve better margins. Focused differentiation through capitalization of extensive assets ensures profitable growth and offers competitive advantages.

    Strong performance of the solid waste business continues to boost cash and earnings. Waste Management expects yield momentum to continue in its solid waste lines of business.

    The company's successful cost-reduction initiatives have helped it in accomplishing remarkable gross margin expansion and EBITDA growth over the quarters. Acquisitions of Anderson Rubbish Disposal and Moorpark Rubbish Disposal are helping it to streamline existing operations.

    Waste Management is focused on maximizing return on disposal network. A strong economy and benefits of volumes from third-party haulers that select the company's close end disposal sites lead to higher volume being disposed at its facilities. The company is expected to leverage logistical benefits of its disposal network and increase returns on large investment in the network.

    The company's dominant market capitalization, steady dividend payouts and share repurchase policy reflect its commitment to create value for shareholders and underline its confidence in its business. In the first nine months of 2018, Waste Management repurchased shares worth $750 million and paid $605 million in dividends.

    The company paid aggregate cash dividends of $750 million, $726 million and $695 million during 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively. It paid $750 million, $725 million and $600 million for share repurchases in 2017, 2016 and 2015, respectively.

    Zacks Rank & Stocks to Consider

    Waste Management currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). You can see the complete list of today's Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.

    A few better-ranked stocks in the broader Zacks Business Services sector include Booz Allen Hamilton BAH, Waste Connections WCN and Republic Services RSG, each carrying a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). Long-term expected EPS (three to five years) growth rate for Booz Allen Hamilton, Waste Connections and Republic Services is 14.4%, 11.7% and 10.7%, respectively.

    Zacks' Top 10 Stocks for 2019

    In addition to the stocks discussed above, would you like to know about our 10 finest buy-and-holds for the year?

    Who wouldn't? Our annual Top 10s have beaten the market with amazing regularity. In 2018, while the market dropped -5.2%, the portfolio scored well into double-digits overall with individual stocks rising as high as +61.5%. And from 2012-2017, while the market boomed +126.3, Zacks' Top 10s reached an even more sensational +181.9%.

    See Latest Stocks Today >>

    Want the latest recommendations from Zacks Investment Research? Today, you can download 7 Best Stocks for the Next 30 Days. Click to get this free report Booz Allen Hamilton Holding Corporation (BAH) : Free Stock Analysis Report Waste Connections, Inc. (WCN) : Free Stock Analysis Report Waste Management, Inc. (WM) : Free Stock Analysis Report Republic Services, Inc. (RSG) : Free Stock Analysis Report To read this article on Zacks.com click here. Zacks Investment Research

    continue reading Waste Management (WM) Stock Up 14.8% in 6 Months: Here's Why

    domingo, 20 de janeiro de 2019

    Waste Management explains Lynn’s holiday trash pickup delays

    LYNN — The company the city uses for weekly trash pickup conceded it ran into a few problems in the weeks following Christmas, and has vowed to correct them so that future cleanups can proceed smoothly.

    Jim Nocella, director of public sector services for Waste Management Co., said that issues resulting in late pickups, or forced Lynners to keep their trash out a second night to be picked up the next day, came as the result of a "perfect storm" of circumstances, not the least of which was the refuse itself.

    "We are concerned," said Nocella. "We understand that people expect us to complete services on the appointed day."

    Ward Councilor Rick Starbard said he fielded numerous complaints from constituents in his area of the city about barrels, yard waste, and discarded Christmas trees being left on the curbs at the end of the day. And he is so concerned about it that the subject will be addressed at a meeting later this month in his ward, with a representative of Waste Management present.

    "This has been a year-long problem," Starbard said. "They're (Waste Management) scrambling. I've seen streets where the trash is picked up on one side, and not the other. A lot of people are wound up about it."

    Last week, Starbard sent out a bulletin to residents from Ward 2 addressing the situation. In the communique, Ed Pacek from Waste Management's public sector solutions department, said that while the company anticipated a post holiday increase in the amount of refuse to be collection, mechanical difficulties derailed plans to deal with it in a timely way.

    "I know the frustration is very real for residents," Pacek wrote to Starbard in an email. "I can assure you that I have escalated this issue on our end and we are doing all we can to get the necessary trucks up and running so that we can catch up."

    Nocella that a cold snap right after New Year's, just when there was a preponderance of yard waste and Christmas trees put out to the curb, exacerbated the problem by causing trucks to break down.

    But, he said, there were other factors.

    First, he said, it was a stormier-than-usual fall, which caused more yard waste as a result.

    "Yard debris can be difficult," he said. "A lot of people are, just now, putting it out on waste pick-up days, and that tends to slow things down. There is definitely more of it this fall than last fall, probably about 30 percent more material."

    He also said the first week or two after Christmas can slow down collectors because of the trees that need to be picked up.

    "All of that going on at once, it can tax the system," Nocella said. And conditions that are less than optimal can slow it down, he said.

    Nocella said that once these conditions level off to the normal cycle, "we should be OK.

    "We obviously try to finish the job on the same day," he said. "We definitely take this seriously, and it has gotten our attention."

    continue reading Waste Management explains Lynn’s holiday trash pickup delays

    Drilling Waste Management Market Projected to Register 6.9% CAGR to 2023

    Jan 14, 2019 (Heraldkeeper via COMTEX) -- Global Drilling Waste Management Market 2018 Includes Market Size, Share, Trends, Growth, Demand, Supply, Application, Segmentation, Opportunity, Market Development, Production, Capacity Utilization, Supply, Analysis and Forecast by 2023

    The increase in the energy demand has resulted in the rise in oil & gas production from the regions such as North America and the Middle East. Due to this increase, there is increase in the exploration & production activities in the region. The drilling activity process plays a crucial role for oil & gas Exploration and Production (E&P). This increase in the drilling activities results in the surge of the waste produced while drilling which comprises of the drilling mud and cuttings. Therefore, it is very important to have a suitable waste management application for drilling processes, safeguarding the environment. Increase in production and exploration activities provides opportunities of drilling waste management.

    Request a sample Report of Drilling Waste Management Market at:https://www.marketstudyreport.com/request-a-sample/1254157?utm_source=marketwatch.com&utm_medium=AN

    North America accounted for the largest market share due to the abundance of the drilling activities created by the increase of the shale oil. Europe is projected to grow at the highest CAGR during the forecast period which can be attributed to the maturing fields in the region.

    The global Drilling Waste Management market is valued at xx million in 2017 and is expected to reach xx million by the end of 2023, growing at a CAGR of 6.9% between 2017 and 2023.

    The Asia-Pacific will occupy for more market share in following years, especially in China, also fast growing India and Southeast Asia regions.North America, especially The United States, will still play an important role which cannot be ignored. Any changes from United States might affect the development trend of Drilling Waste Management.

    Europe also play important roles in global market, with market size of xx million in 2017 and will be xx million in 2023, with a CAGR of xx%.

    Addressing concerns with respect to the competitive terrain of the Drilling Waste Management market:

    ? Which firms, as per the Drilling Waste Management market report, constitute the competitive landscape of this industry?

    ? Which among the companies of Schlumberger Limited.?, Halliburton Company?, Baker Hughes Incorporated?, Weatherford International PLC.?, National Oilwell Varco, Inc.?, Scomi Group Bhd?, Hebei Gn Solids Control Co. Ltd.?, Newalta Corporation,?, Nuverra Environmental Solutions?, Secure Energy Services, Inc.?, Imdex Limited?, Augean PLC.?, Xi?an Kosun Machinery Co., Ltd.?, Derrick Equipment Company?, Ridgeline Canada, Inc.?, Soiltech as?, Soli-Bond, Inc.?, Specialty Drilling Fluids Ltd.?, Step Oiltools?, Tervita Corporation? and Twma Ltd is likely to be the strongest contender in the Drilling Waste Management market?

    ? What is the market share accrued by each of the firms in the Drilling Waste Management market?

    ? What are products manufactured by each of the vendors in the industry?

    ? What are the price trends and the gross margins of each company in the market?

    Market Segment by Type, covers

    ? Solid Control? Containment & Handling? Treatment & disposal

    Ask for Discount on Drilling Waste Management Market Report at:https://www.marketstudyreport.com/check-for-discount/1254157?utm_source=marketwatch.com&utm_medium=AN

    Market Segment by Applications, can be divided into

    ? Onshore? Offshore

    Addressing queries with respect to the market segmentation and more:

    ? Which among the products such as Solid Control, Containment & Handling and Treatment & disposal holds maximum potential in the Drilling Waste Management market?

    ? How much is the market share of each product in the industry?

    ? What is the sales estimate and the valuation that every product is projected to hold by the end of the forecast duration?

    ? Which among the various applications of Onshore and Offshore is likely to emerge the most remunerative application segment of the Drilling Waste Management market?

    ? What is the market share of each application in this business space?

    ? How much is the projected valuation of every application in the Drilling Waste Management market?

    The Drilling Waste Management market research study, in essence, comprises an elaborate evaluation of this business space and projects the vertical to record an highly appreciable growth rate over the estimated timeframe. The report also aims to deliver valuable insights with regards to parameters such as market size, sales volume, and valuation forecast, as well as the market concentration rate and the market competition trends. Further incorporated in the report are details pertaining to the sales channels deployed by prominent vendors in order to ensure the most viable commercialization pathway for their products, a couple of which include direct and indirect marketing. Information with respect to the contribution of distributors and traders in the supply chain are enumerated in the study as well.

    For More Details On this Report:https://www.marketstudyreport.com/reports/global-drilling-waste-management-market-2018-by-manufacturers-countries-type-and-application-forecast-to-2023

    Related Reports:

    1. Global Digital Content Creation Market 2018 by Manufacturers, Countries, Type and Application, Forecast to 2023

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    The post Drilling Waste Management Market Projected to Register 6.9% CAGR to 2023 appeared first on Herald Keeper.

    continue reading Drilling Waste Management Market Projected to Register 6.9% CAGR to 2023

    sábado, 19 de janeiro de 2019

    An island crusader takes on the big brands behind plastic waste

    Try this: Write a list of every piece of plastic you touch in a day.

    I did it. I stopped counting at 56 items.

    Plastic is to our time what wood was for millennia. But unlike wood, most plastic doesn't go away. It ends up as trash in streets, rivers, lakes and oceans. It breaks down into microplastic — particles a tenth of an inch or smaller — and gets into our food and water. The health effects are largely unknown.

    News stories feature dead whales and turtles with stomachs full of plastic. Activists built a huge floating net to collect it (which recently failed). Concerned citizens clean up beaches.

    But that's not helping much. Eight million tons of plastic wash into oceans every year.

    What's the alternative? Is it feasible to persuade the wealthiest, most profitable corporations in the world to completely change the way they make plastic and package consumer goods?

    There's a group of people in a very unlikely place who are aiming to do just that. Their story starts in 2001, in Southeast Asia.

    "Island Boy" on a mission

    Froilan Grate doesn't come across as a fire-breathing revolutionary. At 35 and just maybe 5 feet tall, with a wispy goatee, he has the kind of sincerity you might expect from someone who once wanted to be a priest. He carries a backpack and could pass for a college student.

    He grew up in a village in the province of Iloilo in the Philippines — a self-described "island boy" who loved the feel of hot sand on his bare feet and swimming in the ocean. But the city beckoned. He was accepted by one of the country's best universities in the capital. He chose school instead of the priesthood. At age 18, he took a 19-hour boat trip to Manila.

    Grate remembers grabbing his suitcase and rushing up on deck as the captain announced their entry into Manila Bay. "It was just excitement," he says. "And then slowly, as you come closer to the port … I see … garbage."

    He felt sick. "The contrast of where I grew up, beautiful white sand beaches, clear water, and arriving in Manila where it's black water with countless plastic," he says, "that was shocking to me."

    His first thought at the time, he says, was that his own island would someday end up strewn with plastic as well. His next one was: What can I do to stop it?

    Froilan Grate at his home in the province of Iloilo. He came to Manila at 18 for college — and found his life's work: fighting the tide of plastic. (Photos courtesy of Froilan Grate)

    The trash that trash pickers won't pick

    Now, Manila Bay is much worse. With a growing economy and a swelling middle class, people are consuming at a torrid pace — electronic devices, packaged foods, fancy toiletries — goods either made of plastic or wrapped in it. In fact, that's the story of many Southeast Asian countries.

    But waste management is rudimentary and often nonexistent. In many places, informal cadres of waste pickers collect what they can sell to recyclers. But much of the plastic cannot be recycled. So no one collects it, and it drifts. Everywhere.

    Neighborhoods like Dampalit, which lie along the bay, are like doormats for floating plastic trash. I talked to Dampalit's newly elected supervisor, Carlo Dumalaog. He is a neatly dressed businessman in a neatly kept office.

    "My characteristic is, I am an obsessive-compulsive person," he says. He takes me out to the balcony of his office, where he can steal a smoke and look out on the nets of the village fishponds and the corrugated rooftops of shanties built along the water. "That is the Pacific Ocean," he says, pointing to Manila Bay and beyond. "All the trash from Manila Bay washes here," he sighs. "I clean the trash and plastics, but it comes over from the other cities." And, he says, it also comes from the Pacific, from other countries.

    Saying no to plastic

    At university, Grate did what he could as a citizen. He stopped using plastic bags, plastic straws, plastic anything, whenever he could. He studied sociology but found it boring — too theoretical. After college, he decided to become a community activist.

    He got involved in teaching about environmentalism, what he called "giving tools to change-makers." But he wanted faster change. "You don't actually save a marine turtle by speaking to 1,000 students at a time," he says. He joined an environmental group, the Mother Earth Foundation, and worked with waste pickers to get them formally employed by communities and to improve their working conditions.

    But it still wasn't enough. "You realize that despite everything that you do, you really aren't solving the problem," he recalls.

    With the foundation and backing from international environmental groups like GAIA, Grate helped teach communities to collect their own waste and segregate out the plastic. The goal was "zero waste" — impossible to fully achieve but an aspirational goal.

    In the zero-waste neighborhood of Hulong Duhat, waste workers were hired to roll carts through a warren of alleyways, collecting bags of trash. They have a monitor, too, who charges fines if residents don't separate out the plastic. Those were the rules. "First offense, 500 pesos," says Dahlia Sequita, a community trash monitor, with some relish. "Second offense, 1,000. And third — going to jail!"

    Even so, it's still hard. Says the neighborhood supervisor, Nenita Labiano: "Sometimes I do get overwhelmed with the big problem of plastic." Some people don't cooperate. "We want people to follow the rules," she says, "and yet they don't and it can be sad."

    Sixteen neighborhoods signed on to the zero-waste goal nonetheless, with varying degrees of success. The same problem besets them all — it's not just too much plastic but it's the stuff that can't be recycled. There's nowhere to put it, except in landfills, which are few, and from which plastic eventually migrates, by wind or water.

    The life span of plastic

    In the late 1940s, plastic was newly popular and shiny and amazing. Consumer goods companies advertised its cleanliness and durability. What they didn't talk about much was its permanence.

    At the first national conference on packaging waste held in California in 1969, some executives wondered where all this plastic was going to end up. One marketing consultant said that wasn't their problem. Difficulties with plastic waste "are not the responsibility of those who produce materials, fabricate packages and package goods," he wrote in "Proceedings: First National Conference on Packaging Waste." Rather, he said, it's the consumer's responsibility.

    What manufacturers did was urge people not to litter, as they had for years, by funding the "Keep America Beautiful" campaign. And they continued pumping out new kinds of plastic with yet more uses.

    Map of the Philippines.

    Map of the Philippines. (Graphic by Alyson Hurt/NPR)

    A profusion of packets

    In the Philippines and other parts of Southeast Asia, the problem was compounded by a new kind of plastic packaging that took flight in the 1980s — the sachet. It was a plastic pouch but often bulked up with layers of aluminum or paper for shape or durability. Think of ketchup packets at a fast-food restaurant.

    Sachets are cheap, flashy and convenient. An Indian company used them to sell shampoo or soap or snacks to the poor, who might not have enough cash for a larger purchase.

    Other big companies followed suit with the same marketing strategy: a product the poor could afford, a day's supply of what they needed.

    Eventually, sachets went viral.

    The big drawback, though, is that they cannot be recycled easily. That may not be such a problem in wealthy countries with efficient waste management. But in poor parts of Asia, the packets have created an epidemic of trash.

    You can't drive into Maysilo, a poor neighborhood in Manila near the edge of Manila Bay. You have to walk through narrow alleys. The place greets you with a burst of boombox music, the shouts of children, and barking dogs. People live elbow to elbow in shacks elevated a few feet above ankle-deep water from the neighboring swamp. Below their shacks, you can't tell whether it's dirt or water because it's all literally covered with a uniform carpet of plastic debris, most of it empty sachets.

    Nimfa Manlabe runs a sari-sari store (sari means "varied" in Tagalog) out of her tiny home. It's a Filipino tradition; women selling consumer goods from their homes. "Sunsilk, Palmolive, conditioner," she says, showing off her racks of sachets.

    Her customers "come back here every day and buy these small amounts because that's what they can afford," she explains.

    Because the sachets aren't recyclable, trash pickers ignore them. And even if the packets were recyclable, Grate says, most places in the Philippines don't have the infrastructure to actually recycle them.

    But sachets and other plastic packaging do have their supporters — like Crispian Lao, who used to be in the plastics industry and is now head of the Philippine Alliance for Recycling and Materials Sustainability. The group represents recyclers as well as companies like Unilever, Coca-Cola, Nestlé and others that make and package consumer goods.

    Lao praises the sachets for bringing quality products to consumers in a market where counterfeit goods are common. "There's also the health issue," he says: Sachets don't pose health risks to the consumers in places where water to wash reusable containers might be contaminated.

    Lao notes that the world's biggest consumer goods companies like Unilever and Nestlé have pledged to make all their packaging recyclable and have even set a date — 2025.

    But Grate says that recycling can't wipe out the barrage of plastic in the Philippines. It's a country of more than 7,000 islands. Neither the national government nor local authorities can afford to put up recycling centers everywhere. And would recyclers pay enough to motivate waste pickers to collect the trash?

    Grate says talk of future recycling still puts the burden of cleanup on the consumer. "The problem," Grate says, "is that most companies … feel their responsibility ends the moment they sell it. That's one of the biggest injustices here."

    A lesson from a letter

    After several years of community work, Grate says he changed. He realized that cleaning up plastic at the local level wasn't going to stop the tide. "It would take several lifetimes," he recalls thinking. "At some point you have to change the entire system."

    One incident stands out in his memory. In 2006, he appealed to a big Western company for help. He and his colleagues at the Mother Earth Foundation and Greenpeace wrote to McDonald's to urge it not to use plastic foam packaging. He took the letter to the corporate offices in Manila. No one would come down to talk to him. Eventually a security guard agreed to take the letter.

    "That very moment really crystallized for me the imbalance in the power dynamics," Grate says now. " We were not violent. We just wanted to give a letter requesting them to stop using Styrofoam in their stores." And they simply ignored him.

    Blaming Southeast Asia

    In 2015, a paper in Science magazine shocked the world with extraordinary revelations about the extent of the plastic tide. Jenna Jambeck at the University of Georgia, an engineer and waste expert, calculated how much plastic waste was going into the ocean every year. She is the one who came up with the 8 million-ton figure.

    The research also opened up a wound. It showed that the biggest sources of plastic waste washing into the oceans are in Southeast and South Asia.

    Fingers were pointed. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., laid it out loud and clear in a Senate hearing: "Over 50 percent of the plastic waste in the oceans comes from just five countries: China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam and Sri Lanka. Their upland waste management systems are a failure."

    People in the Philippines were angry — among them, Grate. It was blaming the victim, not the manufacturers. "They know the problem, the s*** they've been giving to the country and oceans," he says. "They know this problem, but they can get away with it. We have to make sure that ends."

    A group called Break Free from Plastic came together in 2016. Its global coordinator is a Filipino, Von Hernandez, formerly of Greenpeace. The plan was to challenge companies. Says Hernandez: "If we cannot recycle it or compost this material, then you should not be producing them in the first place."

    But how to make that happen? The consumer brands were billion-dollar companies. And the companies that make the plastic for all that packaging were giants of the oil and gas industry.

    As for the pledge for 2025, no one knows how companies will do it and how much it will cost to set up a huge recycling system across the islands of the Philippines.

    In 2016, Grate and other local activists in the Philippines proposed a novel action, something no one had done before: brand audits.

    These environmental groups did regular beach cleanups, which helped bring attention to the problem even if the beaches were covered with trash again a few months later. But now they wanted to compile a list of the brand logos emblazoned on the plastic trash and publicize them for all to see.

    "They feel there is value in brand," Grate says of the companies. Consumers trust brands. "We wanted to use it against them."

    The activists targeted Freedom Island in Manila Bay, probably the most notorious pit of plastic in the country, for a brand audit. Plastic not only surrounds the shore but piles up knee-deep on beaches. Plastic bags hang from trees like some kind of surreal Dalí painting. The activists collected trash for days and published online the brand logos printed on each package.

    And they waited to see what would happen.

    Is anyone watching?

    Not much did, actually. Word spread among conservation groups that this "brand audit" was a new strategy. It was naming and shaming. But was anyone else paying attention?

    Grate and his team didn't know, but they kept at it. Along with GAIA and Break Free from Plastic, they've now done more than 20 brand audits in the Philippines and several in other Southeast Asian countries.

    Last September, I saw one in a village called Navotas, a poor neighborhood of cinder block dormitory-style buildings on Manila Bay that floods twice a day, carrying plastic back and forth like some sort of oceanic seesaw. For the audit, volunteers sift through piles of trash, in this case collected from homes. The idea is to see not just what floats onto shorelines but what's coming from onshore.

    It's dirty work — eight days of community trash spread in piles on the concrete floor of a fenced-in outdoor basketball court. It stinks; workers wear masks and gloves.

    Grate dives in, sorting trash into different types of plastic and reading off labels while a colleague takes notes. "Colgate toothpaste sachet," he says. "Colgate-Palmolive Philippines." And another: "Sunsilk shampoo sachet, Unilever." It will take all day to go through all of it.

    He says the companies should be part of the solution. "So who are the companies?" he asks. "That is why we do brand audits."

    Lao, with the Philippine industry group, says the brand audits are a distraction. "There's a lot of very loud noises out there" about corporate responsibility, he points out. "Does it affect brand image at this point? No," he says of the audits, adding, "It has not affected actual performance of these brands in the market."

    He says the major consumer brands are already committed to reducing plastic waste. He notes the well-publicized pledge by the brands that by 2025 they'll use only plastic packaging that can be reused, recycled or composted. In fact, Unilever has a new chemical process to recycle sachets and a pilot plant in Indonesia to test it. Other companies have committed millions of dollars in research funds to find recyclable alternatives.

    In the Philippines, Lao's industry group is planning a research and development effort there to make more plastic recyclable. "The idea right now is that how can we now together, with the global partners, redesign the product so it becomes more recyclable, (and) look at recycling the existing products that are there?" he asks, "because (they're) not going to disappear overnight."

    Activists are skeptical.

    Froilan Grate in Washington, D.C., in December. He was invited to meet with industry representatives about the plastic tsunami in Asia. (Photo by Madeleine Cook/NPR)

    A surprise invitation

    But Grate's name-and-shame approach appears to have had some effect. Late last year, he got a call out of the blue. A mediation group, the Meridian Institute in Washington, D.C., invited him to come talk to people in the U.S. who were concerned about plastic waste. It was a surprise to him. He didn't know how far news of his audits had traveled. And even more surprising: The people in Washington wanted him to talk with corporate executives from some of the very companies he had been targeting.

    I met Grate in Washington, D.C., on a cold sidewalk in December. "I love this weather," he said. "It's like free air conditioning." He said he felt he had to come to the meeting because there was only one other Asian invited. When he got there, he found himself sitting across from senior executives from the oil industry, the chemicals industry and the consumer goods industry. Not just any companies — some of the world's biggest. He was asked not to name them; one attendee told NPR that anonymity was guaranteed so everyone could speak freely.

    I asked Grate if the brand audits made the meeting happen? "They weren't happy about it," he said of the audits. "And they have questions," he added, about how his group does them. "But I would say this: The brand audits contributed to the pace of the discussion that's happening right now."

    I asked how he felt about that. "It's great," he said, beaming. "I was made to feel that I have a voice, and people would want to listen to what I have to say. People were actually interested."

    After 18 years, says the island boy from Iloilo, things are looking up.

    NPR's radio stories on plastic in the Philippines were produced by Rebecca Davis and edited by Geoff Brumfiel. Wilma Consul helped with translation and voiceovers.

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    sexta-feira, 18 de janeiro de 2019

    Food Waste Management market to 2025 with data by product types, applications and regional analysis

    The objectives of 'Global Food Waste Management Market Insights, Forecast to 2025' report are to define and to segment the market based on product types, top companies, key regions and by end users.

    Global Food Waste Management Market value is expected to grow from US$ XX Million in 2018 to US$ YY Million by 2025, at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of ZZ% during 2019-2025 as per 'Global Food Waste Management Market Insights, Forecast to 2025' research report.  This report studies the consumption pattern of Food Waste Management market in key regions like North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Central & South America and Middle East & Africa.

    In addition, this report also covers global Food Waste Management market status, competitive landscape, market share, growth rate, future trends, market drivers, opportunities, challenges, sales channels and distributors.

    Access more details about this report at: www.themarketreports.com/report/gl…insights-forecast

    Objectives of Global Food Waste Management Market report are:

  • • To understand the global Food Waste Management market size (value & volume) by companies, key regions, products and end user, breakdown data from 2014 to 2018, and forecast to 2025
  • • To get the in-depth knowledge of Food Waste Management market by identifying its various segments and sub-segments
  • • To obtain detailed information about the key factors influencing the growth of the market and study of various parameters effective the market like growth potential, opportunities, drivers, industry-specific challenges and risks
  • • Focuses on the key global Food Waste Management market companies, comparing their sales volume, value, market share, market competitive landscape and recent developments
  • • To estimate the sales volume and value of Food Waste Management market / submarkets, with respect to key regions
  • • To identify competitive developments such as expansions, agreements, new product launches, and acquisitions in the market
  • Access this premium research report at: www.themarketreports.com/report/buy-now/1363714

    Key companies profiled in this report are Veolia Environnement, Suez, Waste Management, Republic Services, Stericycle, Covanta Holding, Remondis, Waste Connections, Clean Harbors, Biffa Group, Rumpke Consolidated, Advanced Disposable Services and more.

    Each company is profiled in the terms of company basic details, business overview, sales, revenue, gross margin, products, recent development,. Apart from segmentation by companies, it is also segmented by product types (growth rate, sales, revenue, price, regional analysis, sales & revenue forecast,.) and by applications (growth rate, segmentation by end users, regional analysis, estimated forecast, etc).

    Market segment by Regions/Countries, this report covers:

  • • North America (United States, Canada, Mexico)
  • • Asia-Pacific (China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Vietnam)
  • • Europe (Germany, France, UK, Italy, Russia)
  • • Central & South America (Brazil, Rest of Central & South America)
  • • Middle East & Africa (GCC Countries, Turkey, Egypt, South Africa)
  • Inquire further about this report at: www.themarketreports.com/report/ask-your-query/1363714

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    continue reading Food Waste Management market to 2025 with data by product types, applications and regional analysis

    Abu Dhabi Tadweer awards AED 1 billion waste management contracts

    abu_dhabi_tadweer_awards_aed_1_billion_waste_management_contracts_67930.jpg Image Source: Arabian Industry x DOWNLOAD

    Abu Dhabi Tadweer awards AED 1 billion waste management contracts

    abu_dhabi_tadweer_awards_aed_1_billion_waste_management_contracts_67930.jpg

    Abu Dhabi Tadweer awards AED 1 billion waste management contracts

    Arabian Industry reported that Abu Dhabi Waste Management Center (Tadweer) awarded new operational contracts cumulatively valued at USD 299 million (AED 1.099 billion) to service providers of solid waste collection and transportation, street sweeping and cleaning services in the third, fourth and fifth sectors of Abu Dhabi Mainland and Al Dhafra Region. Announced on the sidelines of the sixth EcoWASTE exhibition, the contracts are part of Tadweer's efforts to improve the cleaning and waste management services in the UAE capital.

    West Coast Saubermacher Environmental Services won a contract worth USD 194 million (AED 713 million) to provide waste collection and transportation services in the third and fifth sectors, while Lavajet Al Ain won an USD 104 million (AED 385 million) cleaning services contract for the fourth sector.

    As per the contracts, the two companies will collect and transport bulky, green and public slaughterhouse waste, clean streets and inner roads in resid ential areas including manual and mechanical sweeping, and clean pedestrian bridges and tunnels.

    They are also mandated to wash waste containers using advanced washing equipment and remove illegally dumped waste in close coordination with Tadweer's strategic partners and other government entities.

    Furthermore, the contracts stipulate the allocation of more than 750 waste containers with a capacity of seven cubic meters each for the collection of municipal solid waste from farms and stockyards as well as the set-up and operation of 140 waste collection points across the assigned areas.

    In addition, the companies will provide 590 specialised cleaning vehicles and equipment, including 59 mechanical sweepers, 34 bin washers, and one new bin-washing vehicle for large containers.

    Mr HE Falah Al Ahbabi, chairman of Department of Urban Planning and Municipalities, and chairman of Tadweer said that "At Tadweer, we are committed to stepping up our efforts to meet t he current and future integrated waste management requirements of the emirate through utilising the latest technologies, employing the best resources available and increasing the efficiency of our operations. This will help us achieve the sustainable development objectives of Plan Abu Dhabi while ensuring the cleanliness and sustainability of our environment and safeguarding the aesthetic appeal of the emirate."

    Source : Arabian Industry

    continue reading Abu Dhabi Tadweer awards AED 1 billion waste management contracts