Red Wing and Minneapolis are just 60 miles apart, but they have very different attitudes about whether it’s better to burn or bury trash that can’t be recycled.
In Minneapolis, residents and activists fought for years to shutter the Hennepin County Energy Recovery Center (HERC), a trash incinerator on the edge of downtown Minneapolis. They argue it contributes to the high rate of respiratory diseases and air pollution in nearby communities that are primarily home to low-income residents of color — and last year, state leaders and local officials agreed they need a timeline to shut it down.
However, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s (MPCA) current policy says it’s better to burn garbage that can’t be recycled or composted rather than send it to one of the state’s 21 open landfills.
And in Red Wing, Mayor Mike Wilson thinks the Xcel Energy incinerator just outside of town is an asset. It takes processed trash from Ramsey and Washington counties and burns it to create electricity.
“I think we’re fortunate, because ... I look at the Burnsville [Sanitary Landfill] and these other facilities that have got these piles and piles and piles of garbage there. Explain to me what they’re going to do with that,” Wilson said. “You’ve got to get rid of it.”
Outside of the HERC, none of the state’s six other waste-to-energy incinerators, which are not in such densely populated areas, face immediate pressure to close down. But at least one operator acknowledged they’ve been told to find alternative ways to handle garbage once their next contract runs out. And as Minnesota reckons with its growing garbage problem and 2040 carbon-free energy goal, the question remains: Is it better to burn or bury the trash?
It’s complicated, depending on how people weigh immediate impacts and future risks.
Why burning is still preferred
Kirk Koudelka, an assistant commissioner at the MPCA, said state law and agency policy follow the Environmental Protection Agency’s waste hierarchy, which says burning trash to create energy is preferable to burying it in a landfill.