Waste not, want not? How Massachusetts became the only state to reduce food waste.
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| Agawam, Mass.
On a recent Thursday, Abe Marciniec unloads two dozen pallets of ice cream 鈥 enough to fill 31 refrigerators 鈥 into a machine that transforms it into fuel.
Today鈥檚 flavor is room-temperature rocky road, but this facility handles all kinds of food waste from supermarkets, distribution centers, universities, and even residential drop-offs.
鈥淲e get everything you can find in Aisles 1 through 12,鈥 says Mr. Marciniec, site manager of the Agawam Organics Recycling Facility, owned and operated by Vanguard Renewables. Mr. Marciniec鈥檚 recycling facility is one of six in the commonwealth and only one of 25 nationwide.
Why We Wrote This
A story focused onMany U.S. communities have taken steps to reduce food waste in recent years, but seen little progress. One state has actually managed to pull it off. Here鈥檚 how.
As the expired ice cream funnels into a turbo separator, Mr. Marciniec watches the machine strip food from its packaging. The organic waste is then trucked to a dairy farm, where it鈥檚 mixed with cow manure and processed into renewable natural gas.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really a great circle,鈥 says Mr. Marciniec. 鈥淔ood starts at the farm, and our farms turn it back into energy. Farm to table, then back to farm.鈥
Consider those day-old strawberries, gone too soon. Whether they spoil on a supermarket shelf or in the back of the fridge at home, they often end up in the same place: a landfill.
Facilities like this one, which can process up to 250 tons of food waste daily, replace manual work typically done by hand or not done at all.
That鈥檚 a crucial step in diverting waste away from landfills. Americans throw out about 40% of food annually 鈥 a waste of both money and natural resources. Reducing food waste can increase food security, promote resource and energy conservation, and address climate change.
The Bay Sate has become a leader in reducing food waste. In fact, it鈥檚 the only state to significantly do so 鈥 to the tune of 13.2% 鈥 according to a 2024 study. Massachusetts was among the first five states to enact a food waste ban in 2014. (The others were California, Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Vermont.)
鈥淭he law has worked really well in Massachusetts,鈥 says Robert Sanders, an assistant professor of marketing and analytics at the University of California San Diego and co-author of the study. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 due to three things: affordability, simplicity, and enforcement.鈥欌
Converting waste into fuel
If food waste were its own country, it would be the third-highest emitter of greenhouse gases after China and the United States.
It鈥檚 also the largest category of waste 鈥 at 25% 鈥 sent to landfills in the United States. In 2019, 66 million tons of food waste came from retail, food service, and households. Around 60% of this waste was sent to landfills, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
Vanguard Renewables specializes in turning organic waste into renewable energy. The Massachusetts-based company partners with dairy farms to convert food scraps and manure into biogas through anaerobic digestion.
Microorganisms in cow manure digest organic matter, releasing biogas 鈥 a mix of methane and carbon dioxide. The gas is captured in large steel vats on the farm and refined into renewable natural gas, which can be used to heat homes and power buildings.
鈥淏asically, we harvest bug farts,鈥 says Mr. Marciniec with a laugh. But the results are no joke. Each of Vanguard Renewables鈥 five digesters produces enough energy to heat 1,600 to 3,500 homes per year.
Since 2014, Vanguard has processed more than 887,000 tons of food waste in New England, producing enough natural gas to heat 20,000 homes for a year. By 2028, the company plans to have more than 50 systems across the country.
Baking food recovery into 鈥渆very part of the business鈥
In western Massachusetts, Amherst College has become a model for limiting food waste at the source. Last year, it was recognized as the winner in the zero waste category in the Campus Race to Zero Waste Case Study Competition.
鈥淭he goal has been to push us aggressively to make sure everything is compostable,鈥 says Weston Dripps, director of sustainability. To achieve that, the school has phased out single-use plastics, to-go boxes, and even canned water, replacing them with refill stations and compostable materials.
In 2023, Amherst College generated 238 tons of food waste 鈥 roughly 4 to 5 tons per week. But instead of ending up in landfills, Vanguard collected 100% of that waste and processed it at its Agawam facility.
That total includes both pre-consumer waste 鈥 such as kitchen scraps from food prep 鈥 and postconsumer waste, like leftovers scraped off plates in the dining hall and campus caf茅s. 鈥淭o really have a clean waste stream, we have to focus on the front end,鈥 says Mr. Dripps.
Amherst鈥檚 approach goes beyond composting. Each month, the school donates 2,000 to 3,000 pounds of frozen surplus food to the the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts, ensuring edible food reaches those in need.
Commercial businesses, too, are finding ways to cut down on waste. Maura Duggan, founder and CEO of Fancypants Baking Co., knows firsthand how much food can go to waste in the food industry. Her company produces hundreds of thousands of cookies each week.
At its Walpole facility, Fancypants has large totes from Vanguard, which collect burnt cookies, food scraps, and anything that can鈥檛 be donated or sold. Last year alone, Fancypants diverted about 22 tons of waste.
Ms. Duggan says the totes serve as a daily reminder that sustainability isn鈥檛 an afterthought 鈥 鈥渋t can be baked into every part of the business.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 sure we can do a better job鈥
For the commonwealth to meet its 2030 goal of reducing food waste disposal by 780,000 tons per year, it has to double its rate of waste diversion.
Back in Agawam, Mr. Marciniec passes by 275-gallon totes full of leafy vegetables. Every day, he faces the reality that Americans waste 92 billion pounds of food a year 鈥 enough to make
鈥淚t really makes you think about the things we take for granted,鈥 he reflects.
鈥淢illions of people are starving everywhere, and the amount of food waste in this country is substantial,鈥 says Mr. Marciniec. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure we can do a better job.鈥