National Post

Is your recycling method a piece of garbage?

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGEN­CE COULD HOLD THE ANSWER TO NORTH AMERICA’S TRASH PROBLEMS

- Nicolás Rivero

IF WE CAN MOVE THE NEEDLE BY EVEN FIVE TO 10 PER CENT, THAT WOULD BE A PHENOMENAL OUTCOME ON A PLANETARY BASIS FOR GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS AND ENVIRONMEN­TAL IMPACT. — AMBARISH MITRA

Recycling is hard. Most people don’t know what should go into their recycling bins — and when they guess, they often guess wrong and gum up the works of recycling facilities in the process.

This year, the United States will spend tens of millions of dollars to teach Americans the right way to recycle. But some companies and researcher­s think it would be smarter to outsource the job to computers.

Waste-sorting plants have been using machines to separate recyclable­s for years. But the machines — which use magnets, gravity, puffs of air and other rudimentar­y methods to sort through trash — aren’t perfect. And human workers can only sift through a fraction of all the recycling that comes through these facilities.

As a result, the “sorted” recyclable­s, particular­ly plastic, wind up contaminat­ed with other forms of trash, according to Lokendra Pal, a professor of sustainabl­e materials engineerin­g at North Carolina State University.

“Today’s technology cannot really detect all the contaminat­ion that could be coming with those plastics,” he said. “But if you know what contaminan­ts are coming, there’s a better chance you will be able to process it and get a cleaner product.”

That’s why Bollegraaf, the world’s biggest builder of recycling plants, and the AI startup Greyparrot are rolling out artificial intelligen­ce systems for sorting recycling. The companies plan to retrofit thousands of recycling facilities around the world with computers that can analyze and identify every item that passes through a waste plant.

“The destiny of a product is decided by this plant,” said Ambarish Mitra, who co-founded Greyparrot. “This is where the highest impact can be made — not in the bins, not in the household, not with consumer education — because this is where the decision is really made about what’s going to happen to that product.”

PUTTING A DENT IN RECYCLING

Not much trash — and almost no plastic — actually gets recycled. About a third of U.S. garbage gets recycled or composted, according to the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s most recent estimate, which relies on 2018 data. For plastic, the figure is closer to five per cent, according to a 2021 report from Greenpeace. The rest goes to landfills and incinerato­rs.

Recycling rates are higher in Europe, where people are more willing to sort their own recycling into different bins for different categories. Americans have shown less enthusiasm for that, according to Barbara Reck, a senior research scientist at the Yale School of the Environmen­t.

To make recycling easier, many U.S. cities don’t ask Americans to separate paper, glass, metal and the many forms of plastic. They just ask people to put anything recyclable into one bin — and let waste plants do the sorting for them.

But waste plants don’t catch everything. Greyparrot has already installed more than 100 of its AI trash spotters in about 50 sorting facilities around the world, and Mitra said as much as 30 per cent of potentiall­y recyclable material winds up getting lumped in with the trash that’s headed for the landfill.

Failing to recycle means companies have to make more things from scratch, including a lot of plastic from fossil fuels. Also, more waste ends up in landfills and incinerato­rs, which belch greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and pollute their surroundin­gs.

Mitra said putting Greyparrot’s AI tools in thousands of waste plants around the world can raise the percentage of glass, plastic, metal and paper that makes it to recycling facilities.

“If we can move the needle by even five to 10 per cent, that would be a phenomenal outcome on a planetary basis for greenhouse gas emissions and environmen­tal impact,” he said.

Cutting contaminat­ion would make recycled materials more valuable and raise the chances that companies would use them to make new products, according to Breck.

“If the AI and the robots potentiall­y helped to increase the quality of the recycling stream, that’s huge,” she said.

But she said the best way to raise U.S. recycling rates is to persuade more Americans to recycle.

“What’s most important is volume,” said Reck, who helps lead the REMADE Institute, a research group backed by the Energy Department. “If somebody is not recycling at all and you can convince them to start, you get higher recycling rates.”

HOW DOES AI SORTING WORK?

Greyparrot’s device is, basically, a set of visual and infrared cameras hooked up to a computer, which monitors trash as it passes by on a conveyor belt and labels it under 70 categories, from loose bottle caps (not recyclable!) to books (sometimes recyclable!) to aluminum cans (recyclable!).

Waste plants could connect these AI systems to sorting robots to help them separate trash from recyclable­s more accurately. They could also use the AI as a quality control system to measure how well they’re sorting trash from recyclable­s.

That could help plant managers tinker with their assembly lines to recover more recyclable­s, or verify that a bundle of recyclable­s is free of contaminan­ts, which would allow them to sell for a higher price.

 ?? GREYPARROT AI ?? As much as 30 per cent of potentiall­y recyclable material winds up getting lumped in with the trash that’s headed for the landfill, says Ambarish Mitra,
who co-founded Greyparrot, which has already installed more than 100 of its AI trash spotters in about 50 sorting facilities around the world.
GREYPARROT AI As much as 30 per cent of potentiall­y recyclable material winds up getting lumped in with the trash that’s headed for the landfill, says Ambarish Mitra, who co-founded Greyparrot, which has already installed more than 100 of its AI trash spotters in about 50 sorting facilities around the world.

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