Mexico City Has a Plan for Going Green


MEXICO CITY - Jan 26 - Daily Herald; Arlington Heights, Ill.


Mexico City wants to turn one of the planets biggest and messiest waste management systems into the greenest in Latin America, if not the developing world.

A newly formed Waste Commission is working to build four state- of-the-art processing centers in the next four years to recycle, compost or burn for energy 85 percent of Mexico City's trash compared with about 6 percent recycled today. If it works, it would put this sprawling, polluted metropolis in a league with San Francisco, The Netherlands and other top recyclers, and first among developing cities, where the recycling rates mostly hover around 10 percent.

"The whole concept of recycling is very new in Latin America," said Atiliano Savino, president of the International Solid Waste Association.

While many places are good at recycling one thing, such as aluminum, Savino said, hes never seen a city revamp its recycling program on this scale in so little time. U.S. and European cities that now have recycling rates over 50 percent began decades ago.

But Mexico City has no choice. The federal government proposed to close the citys main landfill this month, saying the 50 million-ton dump has become too full and leaches contamination. Scientists dispute that, and the closing has been delayed by a city appeal in federal court for an extension. Yet waste management officials know that soon much of Latin Americas largest metro area will be forced into expensive, temporary alternatives for dumping trash.

It will take more than technology to recycle most of the 12,500 tons of trash the mega-city produces daily. As in much of the developing world, Mexico City residents arent accustomed to separating their garbage.

But Fernando Menendez, the dapper, silver-haired Waste Commission director, says naysayers need only look at the success of his other major environmental project. No one thought he could get Mexico City residents out of their cars to cut air pollution, either. But his "Hoy No Circula" campaign now idles at least 1.6 million cars a week.

"Nobody has ever done anything like this," Menendez said of shutting down what he calls the worlds biggest landfill. "But it has to work. Theres no other option."

The Bordo Poniente dump was built on a dry lake bed on the northeast edge of the city in part to handle the rubble from the devastating 1985 earthquake. It now takes about 700 truckloads of unsorted rubbish a day.

The city has required residents to sort trash since 2003, but without providing the infrastructure to handle it. Ninety percent of garbage trucks lack separate compartments for organic and inorganic waste. Thirteen transfer stations are supposed to process waste separately. But on a recent afternoon at a mid-sized center, three men were shoveling tree branches into a pit with plastic foam cups.

Thats where the enterprising informal economy takes over. Mexico Citys garbage workers union officially employs 17,000 and at least 8,000 more unofficially. Paid drivers and so-called volunteers make extra cash collecting "tips" from customers and selling aluminum and cardboard from their routes. Some union members rake inasmuch as three times their wage.

Meanwhile, just outside the Bordo Poniente, garbage pickers, including some children, sift through waste on fast-moving conveyor belts with their bare hands in a foul and dangerous open-air pit.

The Waste Commission plans to replace the ad hoc system with new processing centers about $14 million apiece that by 2012 will recycle 20 percent of Mexico Citys garbage, compost 20 percent more and burn another 45 percent for energy.

As of November, only one center, in the rural southern delegation of Tlahuac, had been approved. Menendez says he is negotiating with private investors to finance the other three, while the Tlahuac center will be paid for with public funds.

The government also will harvest methane gas from the Bordo for energy to power the subway and light homes.

One model for the processing centers is a brand-new, private recycling plant an hour north of the city, Menendez says.

Bio Sistemas Sustentables was created a year ago by a father-son team of Mexican businessmen and Colombian scientist Luis Orlando Castro, who perfected a way to compost waste in 25 days. Organic waste is hand-picked from a conveyor belt and then piled inside a "greenhouse," where workers inoculate it with foot-long syringes containing Castros decomposition formula. The result is rich, organic soil that sells for $212 a ton.

Besides turning a profit, the Bio Sistemas plant has brought the Mexico City exurb of Nicolas Romero 187 new jobs and an 86 percent recycling rate easily the highest in Mexico.

There are other signs of progress. Three of the citys 16 delegations have agreed to pick up recyclables and non-recyclables on different days, allowing the same trucks to be used without retrofitting. The Mexico City legislature in October approved fines of up to $3,800 and 36 hours in jail for anyone caught dumping trash on the streets.

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