Farmers are raising the alarm about the amount of plastic they鈥檙e finding in compost and soil made from the island鈥檚 green waste and they say Oahu’s main compost provider isn’t doing anything to stop it.
鈥淚’m seeing the plastic probably three, four times a week,” said Tommy Irwin, a landscaper who works with gardeners and farmers across the island. Hawaii Earth Recycling is the island鈥檚 largest compost provider, turning more than 140,000 tons of yard clippings, food scraps and wood every year into soil, compost and mulch for plants.
Listen To The Farmers
This story is from Episode 11 of our environmental podcast, 鈥淎re We Doomed? And Other Burning Environmental Questions.鈥 Listen online, on Apple podcasts, Spotify or your favorite podcast app.
The City and County of Honolulu pays Hawaiian Earth Recycling $866,990 a year to accept green waste from more than 160,000 Honolulu homes. Any leaves, grass clippings or Christmas trees you throw in the green waste bins are taken to Hawaiian Earth Recycling to be composted.
Irwin said he recently paid $140 for a truckload of organic soil from the company, but when the truck arrived there were handfuls of shredded plastic bags, plastic bottles and other plastic pieces in the soil.
鈥淚 walked back in there and I said 鈥 so do I get a discount because I’m taking your garbage with it?鈥 Irwin said. 鈥淭hey didn’t give me a response.鈥
Plastic Is Forever
While composting is an attractive solution for dealing with many types of waste, microbes in a compost pile aren鈥檛 able to decompose plastics.
鈥淚t鈥檚 something an awful lot of people have concerns about and I really understand those concerns,鈥 said Caitlin Youngquist, a compost and soil expert with the University of Wyoming extension. She said plastic pollution is a growing issue for the composting industry.
Instead of disintegrating, plastic just crumbles into smaller and smaller bits. The big pieces Irwin is finding in his soil today will one day be tiny fibers.
鈥淭his whole entire area has now been ruined with microplastic,鈥 said Irwin, gesturing to Hawaiian Earth Recycling鈥檚 field in Wahiawa where white plastic bags can be seen sticking out of giant piles of compost and dirt.
鈥淭hey will never be able to get it out now and who’s paying for that? Our grandchildren, our future farmers that need food from this area,鈥 he said.
Hawaiian Earth Recycling canceled a planned tour with Civil Beat and declined multiple interview requests.
Safety Measures
Hawaiian Earth Recycling鈥檚 compost is certified by the U.S. Composting Council, and it sends compost samples to a lab for quarterly testing.
Frank Franciosi, executive director of the U.S. Composting Council, said the lab should count the number of plastics it can see in a sample during the initial screening. But the composter is the one sending in the samples.
鈥淎nd unfortunately microplastics are something that the naked eye can’t see and it is an issue,鈥 he said.
Although you have to have a permit from the Hawaii Department of Health to sell compost in the state, DOH isn鈥檛 testing the product or overseeing day-to-day production.
鈥淥ur oversight is primarily through education, complaint response, permitting and, if necessary, enforcement,鈥 said Lene Ichinotsubo, chief of the state鈥檚 Solid and Hazardous Waste Branch. DOH is primarily focused on water sources being affected by the compost-making process, not on the final compost product, she said.
On its website, Hawaiian Earth Recycling says its the 鈥渙nly licensed facility to make and sell compost on Oahu monitored by the State Department of Health,鈥 which Ichinotsubo said isn鈥檛 true. Three other composters on Oahu have permits to sell their products.
Sorting It Out
David Souza鈥檚 company, Island Topsoil, creates and sells about 3,000 tons of compost a year in Waianae. It鈥檚 a small amount compared to Hawaiian Earth Recycling鈥檚 production, but he says he鈥檚 able to be picky about what he uses.
鈥淚 have someone looking through everything that comes in and we pick out plastics, needles, metal, dead animals 鈥 you鈥檇 be surprised about what comes in,鈥 he said.
鈥淎lthough they鈥檙e my competition — well, I don鈥檛 know if I can call them my competition because they鈥檙e so much bigger than I am — but I do wish they wouldn鈥檛 grind all that nonsense in their compost because it affects the farmers,鈥 he said.
Cheyenne Lurvey, who cares for an agroforest in Pupukea, said Hawaiian Earth Recycling鈥檚 product didn鈥檛 used to be this way. A few years ago small transfer stations across the island stopped accepting green waste. Those stations acted as 鈥渢he first checkpoint,鈥 where staff could ensure plastic wasn鈥檛 in the waste, he said.
Now landscapers and tree trimmers must take their green waste to one of Hawaiian Earth Recycling鈥檚 facilities in Wahiawa, Waimanalo or Kapolei. Lurvey and Irwin said there鈥檚 no longer anyone checking their trucks when they drop off green waste.
Lori Kahikina, director of Honolulu鈥檚 Department of Environmental Services, declined Civil Beat鈥檚 interview request but said in an email that Hawaiian Earth Recycling does sort plastic out of incoming green waste and completed compost.
Hawaiian Earth Recycling鈥檚 website says that individuals dropping off green waste are responsible for ensuring their loads are free of 鈥減lastics and other non-compostable materials,鈥 but Natalie McKinney of the Kokua Hawaii Foundation said it鈥檚 not landscapers and tree trimmers that are the problem. She said it鈥檚 Oahu residents.
鈥淭hey think they can put leaves from their yard in a plastic bag and put that in a bin. No, they need to empty the garbage bag into the bin and put their bag in the trash bin,鈥 McKinney said.
McKinney has worked with Hawaiian Earth Recycling to inform people living on Oahu about the dangers of putting plastic in their green waste bins, and the county Department of Environmental Services says it educates residents about proper procedures.
Green waste bins in many Oahu neighborhoods only say plastic bags should be avoided “as much as possible.”
“I don’t want to put all the blame on Hawaiian Earth because then our taxes will go up,” said Lurvey. “But they need to figure it out and people can’t just be throwing whatever in the green bins.”
All Around Us
Irwin and Lurvey are on the front lines of what scientists around the world are realizing: our soil with a lot of microplastics.
鈥淲hile we鈥檝e known about microplastics in marine environments, soil is really an emerging field,鈥 said Jo Rochester, a specializing in hormone-mimicking chemicals, , that are found in plastics.
Rochester pointed to showing that very, very small microplastics can make their way from the soil into plants.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 crazy to be worried about this because we know toxic chemicals can leach off of microplastics and affect you,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd the actual physical microplastic itself can do weird things once it gets into your body.鈥
Rochester said scientists are in the beginning stages of understanding how exactly these microplastics affect human health, and advancements have been slow.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 really dose an animal with microplastics 鈥 all exposure is environmental,鈥 she said.
It鈥檚 one of the reasons there isn鈥檛 a regulation on how much plastic can be in compost, although there are strict rules on things like heavy metals, salmonella, fecal coliform and pH levels.
鈥淲e need to address the problem at the source which is the proliferation of plastics we use every day,鈥 said state Rep. Chris Lee. 鈥淯ltimately those costs for cleanup are going to be passed on to local farmers and the agriculture industry because nobody wants to have plastics leaching toxins into fields where food is being grown.鈥
鈥淎re We Doomed? And Other Burning Environmental Questions鈥 is funded in part by grants from the Environmental Funders Group of the Hawaii Community Foundation and the Frost Family Foundation.
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