A special report from Dianne Saxe, Environmental Commissioner of Ontario, examines the new law and strategy and what the province needs to do next. “Beyond the Blue Box: Ontarioâs Fresh Start on Waste Diversion and the Circular Economy” acknowledges that Ontarioâs new law is a significant achievement, but calls on government to get serious about making it work. The first steps: get food waste out of landfills and get businesses to pull their weight. âThe new plan looks great on paper,â said Commissioner Saxe. âBut weâve been here before; letâs learn from the past and get it right.â
Ontario is rightfully proud of the Blue Box, which recycles paper and packaging from homes. But the Blue Box diverts less than 8% of Ontarioâs total waste. For real impact, the province needs action on two significant waste streams that have been ignored for far too long.
First, Ontario needs to get all food waste (organics) out of landfills, as Nova Scotia did almost 20 years ago. Food waste in landfills uses up space, causes pollution and releases methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Instead of being landfilled, food waste should be used as a source of renewable energy and a way to repair damaged soils.
Second, Ontario shouldnât let businesses (e.g., factories, malls, restaurants and developers) and institutions (e.g., hospitals, universities and schools) keep on creating and landfilling so much waste. Businesses and institutions only recycle a paltry 15% of their waste, sending 2.2 million tonnes more waste to landfill than residents do each year. Landfilled waste causes pollution and squanders valuable resources that should be reused. Additionally, lax rules allow businesses to get away with making products and using processes that drive a âtake, use once, throw awayâ mentality; cheaper in the short run, but much more expensive for society over time.
The new law, by itself, wonât be enough. To achieve a circular economy, government must also change the social and economic causes of Ontarioâs wasteful habits, and enforce tough standards for waste reduction, reuse and recycling. In a circular economy, resources are used over and over, not just once.
âAs long as it remains cheaper to buy new stuff and throw it away than to repair, reuse or recycle it, a waste-free Ontario will remain a pipe dream,â said Saxe. âIt will take some adjustment. But research shows the huge economic and employment promise of a low-waste economy.â
Beyond the Blue Box reviews what Ontario should learn from its past failures, and how to overcome long-standing economic barriers.
âIn the long run, what matters most is moving Ontario to a circular economy, which means government must play a leading role driving policy that will foster the self-sustaining markets required to make this a reality,â concluded Saxe.