Homer Drawdown: No Scrap Wasted

Drawdown, Climate Change, Recycling

Homer Drawdown is a community-led, grassroots organization working to sequester carbon, reduce emissions, and ultimately fight the climate crisis that affects us all. No Scrap Wasted was selected as our fourth solution last December. This initiative aims to redirect waste streams locally, ensuring that whatever resources are expended are fully utilized.
Homer Drawdown is a community-led, grassroots organization working to sequester carbon, reduce emissions, and ultimately fight the climate crisis that affects us all. Composed of volunteers from the local area, the group follows the framework outlined in the book Drawdown: The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse Global Warming.

No Scrap Wasted was selected as our fourth solution last December. This initiative aims to redirect waste streams locally, ensuring that whatever resources are expended are fully utilized. Nationally and in our community, about a third of all food produced or imported is thrown away. Every carrot and cucumber represents the energy needed to produce it, the packaging material to make it saleable, the fuels used to transport it to market, and ultimately the refrigeration to keep it crisp until it is purchased. Cumulatively, this stream of resources represents much more than just a bunch of vegetables. If food scraps are returned to an Alaskan landfill, they will occupy space in a limited system and produce powerful greenhouse gases as they decompose. They will often be discarded alongside their plastic packaging.  

Volunteers have now organized themselves into three main working groups, each playing a vital role. One group focuses on redirecting excess food to better feed our community and composting what can’t be eaten to grow more food. A second group works closely with local government, existing programs, and infrastructure to ensure reusable materials find new purpose and are recycled properly. The third group partners with experts to host engaging workshops that share resources for utilizing wild and cultivated foods around us. Your involvement can make a real difference in these efforts.

The No Scrap Wasted solution is still in its early stages, and we invite everyone in our community to join us as we forge ahead. Group members are coordinating with the Kenai Peninsula Resilience and Security Advisory Commission, Alaskans for Litter Prevention and Recycling, the Kenai Peninsula Borough, KPB Solid Waste department, and its contractors, Indigenous foodways experts, local artists, venues in the Homer area, small businesses, and all of us who love a good meal. We believe the most impactful and lasting change grows from a diversity of inputs. 

Homer Drawdown meets monthly for a shared meal and work session, creating a welcoming space for community connection. All are encouraged to join us.  

Visit inletkeeper.org/homer-drawdown for more information and ways to get involved.

Similar Posts

NEW Freshwater Temperature Action Plan

The new Action Plan identifies the highest priority actions for the next 10 years that will lead to greater protection of Alaska’s fish and wild salmon habitat from the impacts of thermal change. The keys to success will be continued collaboration and coordination among data collectors and to engage resource managers, who need to understand changing thermal patterns and the implications for freshwater resources to address our fisheries crisis.

Little Mount Susitna Wind Farm

Earlier this month, Cook Inletkeeper commented in support of leasing state land to a planned 271 megawatt windfarm on Little Mount Susitna, a windy plateau west of its big sister, Mount Susitna, commonly known as Sleeping Lady. Chugach Electric Association – which would buy power from the windfarm’s Fairbanks-based developer, Alaska Renewables – estimates it would save 3.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas annually.