Houston Starts National Recycling Contest for Ike Debris

The city of Houston is sponsoring a nationwide contest for the best ideas about how to recycle the 5.6 million cubic yards of tree waste resulting from Hurricane Ike, according to the Houston Chronicle.

With payouts of $10,000, $5,000 and $2,500 for the top three ideas, the city is searching for unique ideas to reuse the wood in an environmentally friendly manner. Ideas will be accepted until the end of October.

“We want to come up with completely out-of-the-box concepts that can create new markets and scale up existing markets,” said Cris Eugster, the mayor’s chief officer for sustainable growth. “And we want something that can be implemented sooner rather than later.”

City officials say the amount of wood is large enough to fill up the Astrodome almost four times.

“We don’t want to have to fill up our precious landfill sites with a bunch of wooded waste, so we’re going to try to recycle all of it,” White said. “It will probably be the single biggest recycling project that there is in the country this year.”

Dallas-based Living Earth Technology Co. and Phoenix-based Allied Waste have agreed to accept a total of 700,000 cubic yards of waste for composting and resale.

You can learn more about recycling efforts with Earth911.

As of June 17th 2011 we have upgraded our comment system to use Facebook comments. The below comments are closed and are listed for historical purposes.

Archived Comments

  1. Bill Walters

    posted on October 31st, 2008 at 8:10 am

    Could this be shipped to areas of the world that are cutting down forests for firewood/cheap housing? We could be helping impoverished peopleand recycling thie wood, and saving valuable enviornment for other species.

Recently Added to Garden

  • New Compost Labels Help Home Gardeners

    The U.S. Composting Council is taking the guess-work out of choosing the right kind of compost by launching its Consumer Compost Use Program – a labeling system that will identify the types of uses that a compost product is best …

  • Your Guide to Winter Composting

    Many people assume that chilly temperatures and snowy conditions rule out composting for the winter. But you can actually recycle your own organics year-round with a little extra maintenance. So, get out those shovels and empty those food scrap bins! …

  • Phoenix Golf Tournament to Go Zero Waste

    With 500,000 expected attendees, the Waste Management Phoenix Open has the potential for a large environmental footprint. But this year’s event has a Zero Waste Challenge, including the presence of zero trash cans on the course.

    This is the third year …

Earth911

Earth911 is an environmental services company that addresses solutions for products' end-of-life for both businesses and consumers.