Reimagine Waste

Cartoon graphic depiction of branches, leaves, and trimmings
Leaf graphic
Leaf graphic
Leaf graphic
Leaf graphic
Leaf graphic
Leaf graphic

Yard Debris

It’s just branches, leaves, trimmings, and clippings, right?  Not really.

It’s a $3.8 billion, 21 billion-pound operational headache for local leaders.

It’s stealing 2,300 Empire State Buildings worth of valuable and limited landfill space.

It’s generating as much pollution as nearly 1.2 million gas-powered cars.

Every year.

It’s a waste

But it doesn’t have to be.

We help local leaders move from wasted potential to recaptured opportunity.

What we do

Using patented climate technology and our revolutionary and patent-pending process, reCap upcycles yard debris into a valuable and in-demand product called biochar. Biochar is amazing, and if you’re dying to know more about why, mosey on over here.

Our process is clean, quick, and compact.  And we offer a smorgasbord of benefits that are unmatched by anyone else.

Impact

Eliminate Headaches

There’s a whole lot of yard debris, but not a whole lot of good options. reCap eliminates the headache for our local partners, fully assuming operations with zero CapEx, OpEx, or labor required from the county or city.

Save Landfills

Whether it ends up in a landfill, a compost pile, or left to rot, yard debris takes up space – really valuable, really limited space.  reCap can extend the life of these limited assets by keeping nearly all of the second-largest component of our waste stream out of traditional waste management assets.

Unfunk the Air

All that rotting yard debris plays a really big role in polluting our air.  Even when it is composted, yard debris still has an equally negative impact on our air as landfilling it.  reCap’s process is radically different, in fact, it’s carbon negative, the only carbon negative yard debris management process in North America.

Conserve Cash

Waste is expensive. We know. reCap is able to offer all these benefits at a lower price, saving communities tax dollars that can be used to fund beneficial programs.

Ready to reimagine waste?