November 11, 2005
Sludge is key, says compost king
Its foul. Nobody wants to go near it, but it composts
well
JOHN THOMPSON
Jim
Little opens a bin of compost inside his home. He hopes sludge produced by Iqaluits
sewage treatment plant will be diverted toward a large-scale composting operation,
rather than dumped in the landfill. (PHOTO BY JOHN THOMPSON)
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Iqaluits compost king is preparing to raise his troops.
Jim Little has the backing of about 100 Iqaluit residents signed up for his
fledgling Bill Mackenzie Humanitarian Society, but the most important members
of his coalition are so small you cant see them.
Tiny organisms called microbes teem away in his compost pile, breaking down
old apple cores, wilted lettuce and other organic waste into nutrient-rich soil.
As of yesterday, the temperature inside the compost was 40 degrees,
Little said in an interview in October. Its still cooking away.
We have some pretty voracious microbes up here.
Last year, Little organized a pilot project in which about 100 families scraped
their coffee grounds and other food waste into specially-marked bags, which
were collected and added to the compost pile, under the rubric of the Iqaluit
Recycling Society.
More recently, hes founded the Bill Mackenzie Humanitarian Society named
after the eccentric Scot and longtime Iqaluit resident who, Little says, had
a fondness for salvaging what he could from the dump.
Conventional models of recycling just dont fit the Arctic, Little argues.
Thats because recycling plastics, paper and most metals isnt a profitable
venture when shipping costs are factored in.
The city reached this conclusion in May, when it decided the four sea cans
of recyclable material it had gathered would be compacted in the landfill, rather
than shipped south.
The more successful the recycling program is, the more it will cost the
city, Little said. Unless you get a barge to ship it out, its
a no-win situation.
Meanwhile, Iqaluits existing landfill has between five to seven years
until it becomes full, said public works director Mark Hall.
But recyclable metals and plastics only fill out a tiny slice of what winds
up in the dump. In contrast, audits conducted over the years show about one-quarter
of what winds up in the landfill is food waste, suitable for composting.
Those waste audits ignore two important ingredients, Little says. The first
is wood dumped at the landfill, which Little believes takes up a large, unaccounted
slice. The second is sludge, soon to be generated by Iqaluits sewage treatment
plant.
We have a plan, Little says, fanning out a pile of papers across
his kitchen table. And the sewage sludge is the key.
Its stinky, nasty stuff, and the city expects to generate 1,630 kilograms
of it a day by the end of next summer. That amount will increase to over 3,000
kilograms when the plant is fully operational. Its foul. Nobody
wants to go near it, but it composts well. It almost catches on fire.
Little also says sludge is essential for a large-scale composting operation,
when combined with a bulking agent, like chipped wood or shredded cardboard,
which could also be redirected from the dump. Once churned and aerated for several
days, it would have almost no smell.
The next move, says Little, is to hire a firm to answer a few basic questions.
He wants to know the cost of packing the landfill at the current rate, and having
to eventually expand the existing dump site.
Hed also like to know what profits could come from a greener Iqaluit.
A small demonstration of the potential value of compost appeared on the sandy
hillside facing the Frobisher Inns entrance this summer, where a patch
of grass grew in the shape of a large letter C, cultivated by Little
and his compost gang.
He imagines the entire town in bloom, rather than coated in sand, in the years
to come. That beautification could benefit the city and help draw visitors,
he says.
His compost program is funded by the federal governments eco-action program.
The Canada Research Council has expressed interest in funding a large-scale
composting operation, one that would involve carting sludge from the treatment
plant to an enclosed canopy with the help of a special vehicle designed to kick-start
the composting process.
But all thats down the road. In the meantime, Little is still searching
for home compost converts. Hes disappointed neither the mayor nor the
minister of the environment enrolled, but hes looking for a long-time
commitment from residents who enroll, not just a composting fling.
This is a permanent change to your devotion to the big bag.
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