Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) Timeline
Municipal Solid Waste(MSW) is another name for garbage. Over half of MSW is "biogenic", or made from renewable materials. MSW can be a source of energy by either burning MSW in waste-to-energy plants, or by capturing biogas.
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1898 |
Energy recovery from garbage incineration started
in New York City. |
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1970s |
- First-generation research was followed by construction of refuse-derived
fuel systems and pyrolysis units in the late 1970s.
- U.S. Navy, Wheelabrator, and Ogden acquired the European mass burn technologies
that would dominate the U.S. industry by the late 1980s.
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1976 |
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
empowered the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to regulate residues
from solid waste incinerators. Unclear wording made application of the law
to municipal solid waste (MSW) power plants uncertain, and the issue was taken to court. |
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1978 |
- Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) enacted PURPA mandated
the purchase of electricity from qualifying facilities at a utility’s
avoided cost of energy and capacity. This legislation was used to require
utilities to pay a higher price for power from MSW power plants than the
plants had traditionally received.
- U.S. Supreme Court defined waste to be an article of interstate commerce
that cannot be discriminated against unless there is some reason, apart
from its origin, to treat it differently, or unless Congress specifies
otherwise for particular articles of commerce.
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1986 |
The Tax Reform Act of 1986 eliminated the tax-free
status of MSW power plants financed with industrial development bonds, reduced
accelerated depreciation, and eliminated the 10-percent tax credit. The
Act also reduced State caps on private tax-exempt bonds in 1988, further
reducing funding sources and increasing the cost of capital. |
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1987 |
Landfill tipping fees doubled, and doubled again
every 2 years due to rising landfill costs resulting from the RCRA.
Siting issues became increasingly difficult. |
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1989 |
EPA report on recycling, The Solid Waste Dilemma:
An Agenda for Action advocated recycling as a waste management tool. |
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1990 |
The EPA recognized MSW power as a renewable fuel
that would qualify for up to 30,000 sulfur dioxide emission allowances from
a special pool of 300,000 designed to promote conservation and renewable
energy. The EPA also required MSW power plants that could process over 250 tons per day to
use the best available control technology (BACT). |
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1991 |
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Subtitle
D: the EPA announced that small, unlined landfills would be required to
close by December 31, 1993. This action spurred the infant recycling industry
and increased tipping fees around the country. Most landfills requested
and received extensions. |
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1992 |
- An EPA memorandum excluded ash from regulation as a hazardous waste
under Subtitle C of the RCRA, as long as it was not characterized as toxic.
- 15 States had adopted recycling legislation.
- The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that State-imposed waste import restrictions
were illegal. "Economic protectionist" measures that violated the Commerce
Clause and were, therefore, unconstitutional.
- President Bush issued Executive Order 12780; it stimulated waste reduction, recycling, and the buying of recycled goods in all federal agencies.
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1994 |
- The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the exemption of MSW (from a hazardous
waste definition) under the RCRA did not extend to ash. MSW ash must be
tested and disposed of in hazardous waste landfills if found to exceed
EPA regulations on hazardous wastes under RCRA.
- Flow Control is defined as: The official authority of waste managers to direct waste generated in a city/area to a designated landfill, recycling, or waste-to-energy facility (e.g., in another State).
- The U.S. Supreme Court upheld challenges to flow control. As a result,
existing flow control contracts could be rendered invalid under specific
situations (on a case-by-case basis). Several plants have shut down as
a result. The California Supreme Court also ruled against flow control.
- The EPA strengthened air emission standards for MSW combustion plants
by requiring maximum achievable control technologies (MACT). It also included
plants as small as 40 tons per day under regulations.
- President Clinton issued Executive Order 12873; it required federal agencies to establish waste prevention and recycling programs and to buy and use recycled and environmentally preferable products and services. Clinton created the Office of the Federal Environmental Executive to enforce the order.
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- The Senate passed a flow control bill to grandfather in existing flow control contracts to prevent the major risk of MSW bond default in 14 States.
- A total of 208 million tons of MSW was generated in 1995. This reflected a decrease of more than 1 million tons from 1994, when MSW generation was over 209 million tons.
- 7,000 curbside recycling programs and nearly 9,000 drop-off centers for recyclables operated in the U.S.
- The United States had 112 waste-to-energy combustion facilities.
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1996 |
- U.S. had a 25 percent recycling rate.
- EPA set a recycling goal of 35 percent.
- The Olympic Games in Atlanta offered voluntary recycling and composting initiatives.
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2000 |
EPA established a link between global climate change and solid waste management. Waste reduction and recycling can help reduce green house gas emissions are contributing to climate change. |
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2001 |
EPA policy required its offices to use paper with 100-percent recycled content and 50-percent postconsumer content. |
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2003 |
Recycling and composting diverted more than 72 million tons from disposal in landfills. |
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2004 |
EPA reported the amount of toxics released decreased 45%, from 6.7 billion pounds to 3.7 billion pounds from 1998 to 2004. |
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2005 |
- 245.7 million tons of municipal solid waste was generated in the United States.
- 32% of the MSW was recycled or composted.
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2006 |
- MSW biogenic provided the most energy from waste energy at 42 percent.
- The second largest share, 37 percent, came from landfill gas.
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2007 |
EIA decided to split Municipal Solid Waste into biogenic and non-biogenic components for future data releases. |
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Last revised: June 2008
Sources: Energy Information Administration, Renewable Energy Trends in Consumption and Electricity 2006. (http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/solar.renewables/page/trends/trends.pdf), July 2008.
Energy Information Administration, Renewable Energy Annual 1995 (
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/FTPROOT/renewables/060395.pdf ), December 2005.
Energy Information Administration, Renewable Energy Sources: A Consumer’s Guide (http://www.eia.doe.gov/neic/brochure/renew05/renewable.html) , December 2005.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Municipal Solid Waste Publications (http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/inforesources/pubs/municipal_sw.htm ), June 2008.
U.S. Census Bureau, Geography and Environment Tables (http://allcountries.org/uscensus/geography_and_environment.html), June 2008.