|
Compostability Composting is the transformation of organic waste into compost. A pile of
organic waste attracts micro organisms normally present in the
environment. If the water content is sufficiently high, the micro organisms
start to consume the nutritional substances. This degrades the organic
molecules, produces carbon dioxide, water and heat (biodegradation). At the
end of the process, the initial waste is transformed into a substance called
compost. In the composting plants, this process is controlled and optimised
in order to achieve a high conversion rates, control the effluent,
control the quality of the final compost.

The compostable fraction of
M.S.W. (Municipal Solid Waste), such as kitchen scraps, grass cuttings,
wastes from canteens, restaurants, etc., contains a lot of water and
decomposes quickly. Consequently, they are not suitable as for
recovering energy by incineration, because the heat is lost in
the evaporating water instead of producing electricity. Furthermore,
in landfill, the wet organic materials are the source of considerable
environmental problems, as the production of methane and possible
contamination of the water tables with contaminated percolates. In contrast,
treatment of the organic part of solid urban waste (also known as the "wet
part") by composting has extremely positive aspects. The production of
compost and its use in agriculture completes the environmental cycle. The
organic material returns to its place of origin in the form of compost, that
is, a substance that maintains fertility, prevents erosion of the soil,
reduces the washing away of inorganic fertilisers and blocks the onset of
micro-organisms that are pathogenic to plants, just to mention some of the
positive aspects found with the use of compost.
Composting is
currently applied to selected waste, which contains only biodegradable
organic material. Traditional plastics are banned from composting because
they resist degradation and cause contamination. In contrast, biodegradable
plastics are allowed, but only if they satisfy criteria established by norms
that define compostable materials. In the absence of rules, definitions and
test methods non-compatible materials were composted in the past. This
caused a lot of harm, especially to the trust of users and of the
technicians responsible for the composting plants. Today, because of
European Standard EN 13432 this is no longer possible.
|





|