Cities & Public Agencies

Existing organics programs can become carbon-removal opportunity development platforms.

MSW2CDR helps cities, counties, waste authorities, school districts, and public agencies evaluate how organic waste diversion, mandates, composting, AD, public facilities, hauler contracts, and climate goals can support a credible CDR roadmap.

City opportunity

The strongest starting point is the system cities already manage.

Food scraps, yard waste, food-soiled paper, green-bin programs, commercial organics rules, composting contracts, transfer stations, wastewater-adjacent infrastructure, public institutions, and climate reporting all create starting points for carbon-removal opportunity development.

Map programs

Identify existing organics diversion, mandates, facilities, haulers, public sites, and policy drivers.

Quantify feedstock

Estimate current diversion, unrealized capture, contamination, and CDR-route eligible material.

Build a pathway

Define technology fit, MRV requirements, pilot sites, funding strategy, and responsible public claims.

Public value

Carbon-removal opportunity development turns waste planning into climate infrastructure planning.

The city does not need to promise immediate carbon credits. The city can begin with a professional opportunity review that clarifies where the organic waste system stands today, where carbon-removal opportunity may exist, and which partners are required to move from diversion into verified durable storage.