Oslo Is So Good At Recycling That It Has Run Out Of Rubbish

Oslo Is So Good At Recycling That It Has Run Out Of Rubbish

Norway’s capital city has a serious waste management issue — they’re way too good at it. Half of Oslo’s 1.4 million residents rely on a steady stream of refuse to power their appliances and heat their homes. Problem is there just isn’t enough rubbish to go around.

Burning municipal waste — everything from household rubbish and industrial scrap to toxic, hazmat and medical refuse — is big, big, business in Northern Europe. “Northern Europe has a huge generating capacity,” Pal Mikkelsen, head of Oslo’s waste-to-energy agency, told the NYT, with more than 400 waste-to-energy plants currently operating in the region thanks to a multi-decade boom in plant construction. “There’s a European waste market — it’s a commodity,” Rooth Olbergsveen, senior adviser for Oslo’s waste recovery program, added. “It’s a growing market.” Unfortunately, this glut of capacity far outpaces the area’s rate of rubbish production.

Overall, Northern Europe only produces about 150 million tons of burnable rubbish a year and yet they’ve built out their incineration capacity to support 700 million tons. The rubbish shortage has gotten so bad that municipalities have taken to not poaching disposal contracts from neighbouring counties but importing it from other countries — England alone exports some 1000 tons of rubbish annually. “I’d like to take some from the United States,” said Mikkelsen. “Sea transport is cheap.”

No matter how it gets to Oslo, the rubbish always ends up the same way: a pile of ash and a puff of flue gas. Incinerators burn municipal waste as a fuel source to produce heat, which boils a large amount of water into steam which then drives an electricity-generating turbine. This system is roughly 14 to 28 per cent electrically efficient but with cogeneration systems that recycle the process waste heat into hot water for homes and flue gas condensers which recycle the fumes for biogas (which powers some of Oslo’s metro bus lines), overall system efficiency jumps to between 80 and 100 per cent. What’s more, it reduces the garbage’s mass by about 80 per cent and its volume by about 90 per cent, all while cooking contaminants and destroying toxins at high heat.

Unfortunately, there’s no short term solution to Oslo’s crippling rubbish shortage. Of course if city officials get really desperate, they can always check in with Naples, those guys are still digging out from the city’s waste management crisis in 2011.

Oslo Is So Good At Recycling That It Has Run Out Of Rubbish

[NYT, Wikipedia, Wikipedia]

Pictures: Corepics VOF/Shutterstock, AP Images


The Cheapest NBN 50 Plans

It’s the most popular NBN speed in Australia for a reason. Here are the cheapest plans available.

At Gizmodo, we independently select and write about stuff we love and think you'll like too. We have affiliate and advertising partnerships, which means we may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page. BTW – prices are accurate and items in stock at the time of posting.