this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2024
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Composting releases carbon. Turns out that landfills successfully sequester carbon rather effectively.
That statement is naturally only true if you don't think about it too much -
Composting releases the same methane that landfills do.
Landfills emit methane when they are filled with biodegradable trash. Parent comment is talking about increasing the volume of biodegradable trash.
Landfills filled with non-biodegradable trash do not emit methane.
I've got nothing against composting in general, but it should not be thought of as either a carbon neutral process or as a solution to trash. It is a solution only to biomass that cannot be readily sequestered from the biosphere.
I don't think this is correct - methane is produced in anaerobic decomposition, while aerobic decomposition will release CO2.
I'd agree that it's a harm reduction strategy, but food production will always have some amount of biomass involved that needs to be taken care of - composting is a beneficial strategy for making good use of this biomass.