USDA OPENS NEW COMPOST FACILITY Release No. 0372.97 Maria Bynum (202) 720-5192 maria.bynum@usda.gov Don Comis (301)344-2748 dcomis@asrr.arsusda.gov USDA OPENS NEW COMPOST FACILITY BELTSVILLE, Md., Oct. 20, 1997--The U.S. Department of Agriculture's new compost research facility demonstrates the benefits of recycling--saving the environment and money, said Deputy Agriculture Secretary Richard Rominger at a 10:00 a.m. dedication ceremony here. "The scientists will develop and test new technologies for cooperative recycling--ways to reduce urban landfill problems while turning excess nutrients and other potential pollutants into valuable products such as organic fertilizer for farms and gardens," said Rominger. "To put the research results into the hands of those who can use it, USDA will join with private industry to develop and transfer new recycling and composting technologies." The new facility is located at the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center (BARC) which is part of the Agricultural Research Service, USDA's chief scientific agency. "Composting converts nitrogen and other nutrients into stable forms that are less likely to enter waterways," said Rominger. "The facility will also help us comply with Maryland's voluntary nutrient management program, designed to keep nitrogen and phosphorus out of the Chesapeake Bay. The project also has national implications for developing similar recycling cooperation between farms and towns," he added. The new facility's 77,000-square-foot composting pad is itself built partly of recycled materials such as coal ash from electric power plants. "We expect to save $13,000 a year by reducing landfill fees and by converting leftover farm, urban and industrial materials to fertilizer, potting mixes and mulch for use throughout the Beltsville center," Rominger said. To build the recycling pad, coal ash was mixed into the clay subsoil along with quick lime and cement dust. The finished product is almost as durable as concrete or asphalt, but costs about one-fourth as much and is easier to repair. It's expected that 10,000 tons of organic leftovers or residues will be composted at the site annually. Since January, Randy Townsend, a Maryland-certified compost operator, has composted residue from BARC's farmland and greenhouses. The residues include cattle and poultry manure, used potting soil, dead greenhouse plants, landscape trimmings, unusable produce, hay, grains and corn ground as silage for cattle feed. For four years, ARS researchers have grown corn, soybeans and winter wheat in soils amended with residues from diverse sources, including cement and coal processors, seafood plants and compost producers. Yields were higher with many of the composts than with commercial fertilizer. Other residues for composting will include drywall and other construction scraps and byproducts from the electric power industry. Composting research at other ARS locations--including labs in Alabama, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Texas--has led to two cooperative research and development agreements: o With the U.S. Department of Energy's Technology Center in Morgantown, W. Va., and Fort Drum Co-Generation Partners, Fort Drum, N.Y., to test farm applications of ash from electric power plants, including a dairy feedlot pad. o With Tascon, Inc., Houston, Tex., to develop a potting mix by recycling waste paper compressed into pellets and mixed with poultry litter or other manures. The pellets can also be spread on land, either mixed as a "green manure" or spread as a surface mulch to protect soil from strong winds. The pellets may also have herbicidal qualities. # NOTE: USDA news releases and media advisories are available on the Internet. Access the USDA Home Page on the World Wide Web at http://www.usda.gov