This working paper examines the next phase of municipal waste system modernization in the United States, where policy pressure is shifting from mandate adoption to operational execution. Drawing on Climate Systems Insider Issues 5–8 and the Municipal Waste Systems OS research model, the paper argues that municipal waste systems are entering an “infrastructure edge” phase defined by measurement capability, organics processing capacity, deferred system cost, procurement design, and distributed recovery models. The paper identifies four connected shifts: measurement is becoming core infrastructure; organics collection is expanding faster than processing capacity; deferred waste system costs are surfacing as rate, procurement, and compliance risk; and distributed organics models are becoming a practical complement to centralized processing infrastructure. The paper is intended for municipal leaders, solid waste professionals, procurement teams, climate and sustainability offices, infrastructure planners, and practitioners working on organics diversion, landfill methane reduction, recycling system modernization, and waste-climate implementation.
Anderson Cam (Sun,) studied this question.