Data & maps · Biosolids flows
Westchester County (2015)
A snapshot figure showing biosolids flows for Westchester County. Use this to identify where today's routing creates cost, emissions, and community tension—then design a pilot that can scale.
Biosolids are managed with extra caution. HVB does not support co-digestion of sewage sludge with food waste or other community organics. Learn why and what pathways are considered safe.
Westchester County biosolids brief
Directional snapshot to inform pilot packaging.
What this suggests
- The 2015 figure for Westchester County organizes flows across land application, landfill, and storage corridors; treat it as directional context rather than moment-specific totals.
- Seasonal storage, hauling windows, and permitting constraints appear layered in the stack, so use them as framing cues before sizing any permanent assets.
- This snapshot invites conversations about regenerative soil, nutrient reuse, or transport synergies; confirm current markets and odor/traffic controls before assuming those benefits.
Pilot implications
- Westchester County WWTP synergy - Highlights how a WWTP can anchor local pilot routing when markets fluctuate.
- Wheelabrator Westchester - Illustrates how energy-from-waste can handle directional loads when diversion caps reach capacity.
- Colonie solid waste landfill integration - Keeps a mid-Hudson landfill archetype on the table for excess biosolids.
Policy hooks
- Environmental justice postures - Credit this narrative for trust-building and benefit framing in the community.
- Funding & grants - Tie the brief back to known funding paths before finalizing capital asks.
- Food waste law implications - Use it as a reference when working near organics or composting regulations.