I wrote about science-related reading in June, mentioning that there were other books that were more environmental, but they had been going to go together.
The way that happened was that -- back in 2019 -- Congresswoman Suzanne Bonamici held a town hall with Betty Shelley of the Reduce Your Waste project.
So, yes, that has been a while. There are links that don't work anymore, though sometimes they have moved to other sites.
Regardless, there were two books that were added to the list that I knew I would get to:
Plastic: A Toxic Love Story by Susan Freinkel
Garbology: Our Dirty Love Affair With Trash by Edward Humes
As should surprise no one, there were some other books that had ended up on my reading list in other ways but that I thought would relate.
More surprising was that when I looked up Garbology Humes had written two other books that seemed completely relevant:
Door to Door: The Magnificent, Maddening, Mysterious World of Transportation
Total Garbage: How We Can Fix Our Waste and Heal Our World
(He's also written some true crime books, so I may not be done with Humes yet.)
There was a common thread with all of them that relates to other books. I will get to that next week, but first a few things about waste.
The first thing was from Betty's talk. She mentioned them looking in a garbage dump and finding a hamburger that was very old but still looked... maybe "edible" is not the right word, but it hadn't decomposed.
That makes sense; to avoid contamination of the soil and water table, dumps are set up so that the waste is not going to break down and return to the earth. That's as it should be, but if you are buying something biodegradable and then throwing it in the trash, you may not have accomplished anything.
If it was made with recycled materials or used less resources in some other way, that may be the better choice, but it requires some thought.
Part of the Shelley family's claim to fame was that they reduced their waste enough that they had to take a little bag to the dump about once a year. That's incredible, but it doesn't happen easily.
From the reading, there were three other things that were important.
Don't take things for granted:
It's easy to think that other people are doing the same things, but that may not be true.
Aluminum is remarkably recyclable and because of its source, there is a strong return on investment with recycling. The US still doesn't recycle nearly as much as they should, so much so that to make new cans from 70% recycled material, we need to import used aluminum from other countries.
That is different in states with a bottle bill. Oregon's was enacted the year before I was born, so I have never known anything else.Those ten states do great, but it's only ten.
It's similar to the issue with plastic bags. I am so used to taking reusable totes that I don't even think about it, but it's not like that everywhere. Part of that is...
Companies fight those laws hard and they lie:
I remember seeing things saying that one reusable bag does more environmental harm than X amount of plastic bags, except that it was assuming you used the bag once (as if it were not reusable), except there were still other problems with the math.
It appears that law that deals with trash or recycling or saving the Earth is similar to laws about tobacco or really so many things. If it might add to some corporate obligation, they don't want it, no matter how much good it could do.
A lot of it comes down to transport:
Door to Door was especially strong in this area, though it wasn't the only place it came up.
A lot of recycling does work well, but if it is not affordable it is because it is costing more to send it to other countries where they pay people low enough wages to make the sorting worthwhile and transportation costs are going up. It could be done here with decent wages, but then that would affect corporations who are subsidized by our throwing things out and paying for trash pickup, but we don't think of it that way. They make the waste, sometimes more than necessary, but at an advantage to them that everyone else pays for.
You can bet they are going to lie about that.
The lie is mainly that things can't be any better. We can't do any better.
It is a lie. Don't fall for it.
And all four of those books are really worth reading.