SEATTLE (Waste Advantage): A new program would use artificial intelligence to make recycling better in Nashville. But first the Metro Council has to give it the OK. According to the Tennessee Environmental Council (TEC), roughly $180,000 worth of recyclable materials end up in landfills each year. Nashville Department of Waste Services leaders tell News 2 this pilot program—that would be funded with state money—could help to mitigate that.
There will be a camera set up on waste management trucks, and when material is dumped, the camera can scan the different materials. It then identifies if there is a plastic bag, bagged materials or even something that could tangle later on, slowing down the separation process at the facility. Leaders say the goal is to educate people more effectively about what can and can’t go into the recycle bin.
“We see a lot of folks bag the recyclable materials, and when they bag it, there’s no machine that’s breaking those bags open. So, while you’ve got a resident that’s done a really good thing—they want to recycle—but they’ve bagged all that material, so all their hard work still goes to the landfill,” said Jenn Harrman, the administrative services manager for the Nashville Department of Waste Services. “When you do put materials in that bin that can be recycled, they’re absolutely getting recycled, and they’re staying within about a four-hour radius here of Nashville.”
Courtesy: www.wasteadvantagemag.com
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