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Plastics Are A Growing Waste Problem For Farmers
By Amy Quinton on Friday, August 28, 2009.
Contrary to our bucolic visions of farms in New Hampshire surrounded by natural beauty…farms and nurseries use thousands of pounds of plastic every year. (moo) "these are double wrapped ones (sound of plastic) there’s two layers of this on them." Toule tears off plastic from a 56 pound roll that he uses to cover his round hay bales. "(sound) the idea is to keep the air out of your product cause once air enters it you get molding and spoilage and then it’s no good." The ag bags are about eight feet in diameter and 200 feet long. "typically I use about a thousand pounds a year, between my bales and my bags" That doesn’t include the 50 pound plastic bags of fertilizer, or the plastic containers used for cleaning products. "we take them to the town dump…and I live in Loudon so it goes to the Wheelabrator site and the incinerator." In most other parts of the state, all that plastic ends up in landfills. "if you think of all the greenhouses you see, polyethylene is used as a roof for the greenhouses, it’s a double layer of plastic that has ultraviolet inhibitors in it." Cole says there are also plastic bags for potting soil, and all those plastic pots and treys and containers. “The problem with flower pots, the challenge is that they’re polypropylene, and typically polypropylene is not as common as polyethylene it’s tough to get someone to use it and want to recycle it, as far as I know all the people that are interested in it are in the Midwest, so there’s nothing local.” Cole is referring to plastics identified as number 4 and 5, in those little triangles that appear on most plastic consumer products. “It’s a waste of the resource of the energy in oil to be burning it or sticking it into a landfill when it can be reused” That’s Lois Levitan with Cornell University, she’s leader of the Recycling Ag Plastics Project. “in many states whether its legal as it is in New York, or not, they’re either burning them in an open field, or they’re plowing them into the ground, or just sticking them to the woods, and upset about it, they don’t want to be doing those things." It’s illegal in New Hampshire to burn in open fields. “the problem is they tend to be contaminated at least in the view of the plastic processors with soil, organic matter, manure feed and that is a problem for the people who grind it up and make waste plastic.” Processors would have to be producing a certain kind of plastic product, like plastic lumber for decking, or bumpers for cars, not plastic cups or medical supplies. Post a comment
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