The Bin: A Revolutionary Technology Unveiled in New York City

The Bin: A Revolutionary Technology Unveiled in New York City



New York City discovers a revolutionary technology: the bin

AH ⁣NEW YORK, how it sparkles—from afar. Street level is a different experience. Smelly rubbish​ mounds create trash-fjords on ​city pavements, with⁤ buildings on one side and piles⁢ of black bin-bags⁢ on the ⁢other. New Yorkers know to lift their‌ feet to avoid the garbage juice that leaks ⁣from the bags. Rats⁤ feed‍ on the bags, startling even the hardiest citizens.  For ⁤decades⁣ New York endured​ this, nay accepted it, but no more.⁣ A ‍massive “containerisation programme” is⁤ under way. The piles of black bin-bags are being replaced by a technology new to the city: secure ​bins.

On October 11th Eric Adams, New York City’s mayor, and Jessica Tisch, his ⁤sanitation commissioner, announced that from autumn of ​2024 buildings with nine or fewer residential units will be required to place all trash in⁤ secure⁢ containers. That will cover 765,000 buildings, or 95% of the city’s residential properties. It follows similar measures for commercial ​trash, which amounts ‍to roughly ⁢20m pounds (9m kg) a day, announced​ last month. Container rules for the city’s 40,000 ⁢food-related businesses, including restaurants, grocers and bodegas, were ​implemented over ‍the summer. Altogether‍ 70% of the city’s waste⁣ is ⁣heading into containers.

Containerisation is the norm for ⁤cities like‍ Barcelona, Milan and Paris. Cities in ​South Korea and the Netherlands use submerged ones, something⁤ out of reach‌ for New York,⁣ where the realm below ​the ​pavement‍ is a crowded maze of sewage ‌pipes, gas pipes,⁣ power‍ cables, fibre optics and the subway. “We are playing a massive game of catch-up with the rest of the world,” says Ms Tisch.⁢ “New York City is⁣ not going to be the first city ​to containerise trash; we’re going to be one of the ‍last.”

2023-10-12 09:04:45
Link from ⁣ www.economist.com
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