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COUNTY OF HAWAII <br />STATE OF HAWAII <br />RESOLUTION NO. 826 08 <br />RESOLUTION URGING THE DIRECTOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF <br />ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT TO DEVELOP AN ORDINANCE AND <br />IMPLEMENT A PLAN TO PROHIBIT FOOD, PAPER AND COMPOSTABLE <br />ORGANICS FROM HAWAII COUNTY LANDFILLS BY 2012 <br />WHEREAS, landfilling food and paper is greatly contributing to global warming; and <br />WHEREAS, more than 100 tons of biodegradable materials, including paper products, <br />food scraps and yard trimmings, aze landfilled in the County of Hawaii every day. These <br />materials amount to approximately half of our island's discarded resources, and when buried in a <br />landfill, they decompose without oxygen and generate methane, an efficient atmospheric heat- <br />trapping gas and a major factor in climate change; and <br />WHEREAS, methane is understood to be 72 times more potent than C02 in causing <br />climate changes over a 20-yeaz period, the amount of time scientists have determined <br />is left before the planet reaches the "tipping point" on irreversible climate change. Landfills are <br />the number one source ofhuman-caused methane in the United States and emit the greenhouse <br />gas equivalent of 20 percent of our country's coal-fired power plants every year; and <br />WHEREAS, commercial farming and shortsighted land use policies favoring <br />energy-intensive pesticides, fertilizers and irrigation water have resulted in dramatic increases in <br />greenhouse gases dischazged into the atmosphere for more than fifty years. These practices have <br />contributed to one-third of the increase in atmospheric C02, while causing erosion, <br />sedimentation, water pollution and the progressive stripping of organic matter, beneficial <br />microbes, carbon and other essential nutrients from our soils; and <br />WHEREAS, healthy soils are capable of holding twice the carbon stocks of plants. <br />Release of soil bound carbon through tilling, unsustainable and other short sighted farming <br />practices cause soils to contribute to, rather than protect against, global warming. These <br />unsustainable methods also compromise the ability of using soil to grow food locally, <br />nutritiously, and sustainably; and <br />WHEREAS, Hawaii cun•ently imports 90% of its food and urgently requires the <br />healthier soils that can be produced through diverting organic materials from the landfill and <br />returning the nutrients and organic matter back to farmland to grow its own. This is a critical <br />component of re-creating a more sustainable society on our island; and <br />WHEREAS, the quickest and cheapest way to immediately reduce our community's <br />