Calgary Economic Development






Recycling & Composting
Relocate And Expand | Infrastructure | Recycling & Composting 

 
 


The City of Calgary is serious about recycling, and as such has set ambitious goals for the future to reduce waste added to its landfills. Its long-term goal is to reduce the amount of waste going to landfills to just 20%, and recycling or recovering 80% of waste materials by the year 2020. Currently, the numbers are the other way around: 80% of waste goes into the landfills and 20% is recycled.

Citizens are so conscientious about recycling that they are now sending about the same amount of waste to landfills as they were doing a decade ago, with a population of 150,000 fewer people. So while the amount being landfilled has stayed the same, the amount of material being diverted and recycled has increased dramatically.

Almost 29 million kilograms of material were collected at neighbourhood depots in 2003. This is an increase of approximately 2 million kilograms from the previous year. The total amount outweighs 75 Boeing 747 jumbo jets stacked together!

Fast Facts

Collected from Neighbourhood Depots Amount   Collected from Other Recycling Programs Amount
Newspaper & Magazines 18,568,000 kgs   Computer Equipment 220,000 kgs
Glass Containers 1,094,000 kgs   Christmas Trees 50,000 trees
Metal Food Cans 664,000 kgs   Leaves & Pumpkins 1,790,000 kgs
Milk Jugs & Cartons 363,000 kgs   Batteries 210 kgs
Residential Mixed Paper & Cardboard 7,663,000 kgs   Tires 192,000 kgs
Commercial Mixed Paper & Cardboard 548,000 kgs   Propane Tanks 78,000 kgs
Plastic Bags 75,000 kgs   Oil 424,216 litres
Total Collected from Neighbourhood Depots 28,427,000 kgs   Scrap Metal (Appliances) 5,974,000 kgs


Composting is a naturally occurring process of decay. When gardeners build compost piles they speed up and intensify this process, producing a "home-made" fertilizer.

There are many benefits to composting. It reduces the amount of household garbage -- about one third of household waste can be composted -- which in turn reduces wastes sent to landfills. The finished product of composting -- Humus -- makes soil easier to work. Compost improves the chemical and physical properties of the soil, decreases leaching, and acts as a slow-release fertilizer. Compost can be used as mulch around trees, and in shrub and flower beds. When you use your own compost you don't need to buy expensive soil conditioners and fertilizers.



Additional Information on Recycling and Composting