National Organic Program

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Nov. 10, 2009:

The National Organic Program (NOP) is allowing the continued use of corn steep liquor to be used as a nonsynthetic input in organic crop production. 

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COI In the News

Waste program takes bite out of trash at Rider University

Original Article published in the Rider News:
http://comm.rider.edu/wordpress/2010/02/18/waste-program-takes-bite-out-of-trash/

by Melanie Hunter

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Signs in the faculty dining room instruct on proper disposal of waste.

The kitchens on Rider’s Lawrenceville campus are now diverting all of their food waste from the garbage bins and sending it off campus to be turned into organic fertilizer. 

“It’s really a no-brainer,” said Melissa Greenberg, Rider’s sustainability coordinator. “We’re going to save money, it’s good for the environment, and the waste product is getting repurposed for business and residential use. Everybody wins.”

Currently, Americans throw away 25 percent of the food they prepare, and as a result, more than 25 million tons of food waste are sent to landfills each year. Rider sent 1,297 tons, or more than two and a half million pounds, of solid waste to the landfill during the 08-09 school year.

Rider’s new program went into effect at the beginning of this month. Aramark employees began training on Feb. 2, and the first separate pickup for food waste took place the same week. In that week alone, Rider prevented 6,560 pounds of food from being sent to the landfill.

The recycling process begins in the kitchens. Employees collect the leftovers from food preparation at both locations and from the conveyor belt at Daly’s. The food waste is then picked up by Rider’s garbage hauler, Waste Management (WM). WM brings the food waste to a plant owned by Converted Organics in Keasbey, N.J., a company that turns the material into organic fertilizer. The product is used on large-scale projects, such as golf courses, and is also sold in retail stores such as Whole Foods and Home Depot.

Read more...

Converted Organics Featured on News 12 New Jersey

Star-Ledger Video Feature on NJ.com

New Jersey manufacturer makes fertilizer from food waste

The United State produces more than 25 million tons of food waste annually. Most of that food ends up in landfills. Converted Organics, a Boston-based company with it’s manufacturing facility located in Woodbridge, is doing something about it. The plant receives more than 50 tons of food waste each week from regional restaurants and markets. It then uses high temperature liquid composting, a state-of-the-art microbial digestion technology, to convert the food waste into dry pellets and liquid concentrated organic fertilizers. (Video by Andre Malok/The Star-Ledger)

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Woodbridge recycling company turns food waste into fertilizer

Waste Fertilizer
By Tom Haydon/The Star-Ledger
November 24, 2009, 9:00PM

WOODBRIDGE -- They may have looked sweet in produce bins at the local supermarket, but on the floor of a dank Woodbridge warehouse, all those apples, melons and other fruits amount to a pile of rotting, smelly garbage. Come next spring, that malodorous heap could be the fertilizer on your neighbor's plush, green lawn.

Converted Organics, a recycling company with a plant in Woodbridge's Keasbey section, receives more than 50 tons of food waste each week - everything from oldish fruits and vegetables to past-its-prime meat and fish - and uses it to produce solid and liquid fertilizer for retail sale.

Environmental officials say the firm is the only one of its kind in the state and, perhaps, the country, giving it some cutting-edge cachet in the decidedly unglamorous recycling field.To Edward Gildea, Converted Organics' chief executive officer, the company's work is a win-win green industry.

To read the full article, please click:
Woodbridge recycling company turns food waste into fertilizer

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