Garbage, often called municipal solid waste (MSW), is the
source of about 10% of the total biomass energy consumed in
the United States. MSW contains biomass (or biogenic)
materials like paper, cardboard, food scraps, grass
clippings, leaves, wood, and leather products, and other
non-biomass combustible materials, mainly plastics and other
synthetic materials made from petroleum.
Since 1985, recycling and composting programs in the United
States have reduced the share of biogenic material in MSW
that is land filled or burned, while the share of
non-biogenic content has increased. About 60% of the MSW (by
weight) that is now land filled or burned is biogenic. The
biogenic material contributes about 55% of the energy when
MSW is burned in waste-to-energy facilities. Decomposing
biomass in MSW landfills produces methane, which is captured
and used to generate electricity at many large landfills.
Americans produce more and more waste each year. In 1960,
the average American threw away 2.7 pounds of trash a day.
Today, each American throws away about 4.5 pounds of trash
every day. What are we going to do with all our trash? One
solution is to burn it. (Burning is sometimes called
combustion.) Organic waste is waste that is made from plant
or animal products. All organic waste contains energy.
People have burned one type of organic material — wood — for
hundreds of thousands of years. Ancient peoples burned wood
to keep themselves warm and to cook their food.
Today, we can burn garbage in special waste-to-energy plants
and use its heat energy to make steam to heat buildings or
to generate electricity. There are about 90 waste-to-energy
plants in the United States. These plants generate enough
electricity to supply almost 3 million households.
But providing electricity is not the major advantage of
waste-to-energy plants. It actually costs more to generate
electricity at a waste-to-energy plant than it does at a
coal, nuclear, or hydropower plant.
The major advantage of burning waste is that it reduces the
amount of garbage we bury in landfills. Waste-to-energy
plants dispose of the waste of 40 million people.
The average American produces more than 1,600 pounds of
waste a year. If all this waste were landfilled, it would
take more than two cubic yards of landfill space. That's the
volume of a box 3 feet long, 3 feet wide, and 6 feet high.
If that waste were burned, the ash residue would fit into a
box 3 feet long, 3 feet wide, but only 9 inches high.
There also are solid waste incinerators that simply burn
trash. They don't use the heat energy to make steam or
electricity.
Between waste-to-energy plants and solid waste incinerators,
the United States burns 14% of its solid waste.
From eia.gov