Garbage Pickups Going Green
UNIVERSITY PLACE, WA - From energy-efficient light bulbs to houses using solar power; more companies are “going green” these days. Garbage companies are not about to be left behind.
UNIVERSITY PLACE, WA - From energy-efficient light bulbs to houses using solar power; more companies are “going green” these days. Garbage companies are not about to be left behind, reported in www.thenewstribune.com.
The latest entrant is University Place Refuse, which began using cleaner-burning biodiesel in its entire fleet of trucks that fill up with regular diesel. The switch is just the start, said general manager Roger Gruener. The company initially is using a mixture of 5 percent soybean biodiesel and 95 percent regular diesel. UP Refuse fills all 26 of the garbage, recycling and yard-waste trucks it runs every day with this mix.
Eventually, UP Refuse would like to move to a blend with 20 percent biodiesel, he said.
“The nature of our business is recycling, so going green made sense,” Gruener said.
The company’s management considered the switch for a couple of years, but it wasn’t sold on the reliability of biodiesel and its high price compared to the regular stuff.
But Gruener said quality has improved and prices now are only about 6 cents more per gallon than regular diesel. He said the change won’t affect the curbside pickup rate for customers.
UP Refuse – which also serves Fircrest – is part of a wave of municipalities and their contractors shifting to eco-friendly practices.
• In December, Federal Way announced it would spend about $50,000 to buy five hybrid vehicles.
• Pierce Transit’s entire fleet of buses runs on compressed natural gas, which reduces emissions by 90 percent compared to regular diesel, according to the agency’s Web site.
• The City of Tacoma has filled its garbage trucks with biodiesel for six years. Floyd Wilson, manager of Tacoma’s fleet, said all 65 garbage trucks are filled with a B20 mix – a blend of 20 percent biodiesel and 80 percent petroleum diesel.
In the summer months – when there’s less chance of biodiesel gelling or not functioning properly due to cold temperatures – the city sometimes uses a blend of about half biodiesel, he said. Wilson added that the cleaner diesel has never caused mechanical problems or failures on Tacoma’s trucks.
“I’d like to see us go 100 percent biodiesel if we could, but that’s probably not going to happen,” he said.
Harold LeMay Enterprises, one of three companies licensed by the state to collect garbage in Pierce County, doesn’t use biodiesel. But the company is looking at buying a pair of trucks this year that run on natural gas.
Doug LeMay, the vice president who oversees the fleet, says it has an even grander vision for helping the environment: Using methane fumes from its landfill in Graham and converting them to either liquid or compressed gas.
The plan would not only be good for the environment, but also would supply
LeMay garbage trucks with more than enough fuel, he said. The plan is only conceptual, LeMay said.
Environmental groups and others have long noted how diesel garbage trucks add to environmental problems. They spew more pollution than other large vehicles because they’re often older, less fuel-efficient and make frequent stops and starts in compact residential neighborhoods.
Converting sanitation trucks nationwide to alternative fuels would have a greater effect on air quality than converting all mass transit buses, said a 2003 report by Inform Inc., a national environmental research organization.
UP Refuse’s switch to B5 biodiesel might seem like a small hop compared to the leaps Tacoma and others have taken. Gruener acknowledges he’s not one to invest thousands of dollars into something that won’t return a decent profit.
But the choice was easy with biodiesel. He says the switch could prompt the company to study other ways to lessen its environmental impact.
“This is probably more of a kickoff to look at everything we do,” Gruener said
More Fuel

June Fuel Update: Prices Fall Below $4
Drivers are finally getting some relief at the pump. The national average gas price has dropped below $4 a gallon for the first time in months, with prices falling in 47 states as oil markets react to developments in U.S.-Iran negotiations.
Read More →
Study: How 2026's Gas Price Hikes Affect Different Vehicle Types
New data from iSeeCars reveals how rising fuel costs have affected different vehicle segments as gasoline prices climbed nearly 46% over the past four months.
Read More →Are You Tracking Your Fleet's True Total Cost of Ownership?
Bobit Business Media surveyed 190 fleet professionals and found that while most fleets are tracking costs, fragmented systems and data gaps are keeping true TCO visibility out of reach. With rising pressure to control spend in an increasingly volatile environment, the gap between what fleets think they know and what the data actually shows is wider than you might expect. See how your peers are managing costs today and where the industry still has room to improve.
Read More →
May Fuel Update: All Regions Experience Declines
Gas prices are finally easing in much of the country, but experts warn global tensions could quickly reverse the trend as the national average remains well above last month’s levels.
Read More →
April Fuel Update: Prices Climb Above $4 as Spring Surge Accelerates
National average jumps to $4.04 per gallon, up sharply from last year, with West Coast prices topping $5 and further increases expected amid rising oil tensions.
Read More →
Tips from Fleet Managers on Saving Fuel Costs
Fleet leaders share practical strategies to reduce fuel spend through smarter policy, routing, and driver guidance.
Read More →
March Fuel Update: Prices Settle With a $4 Average
Fuel prices significantly slowed this week, but a $4 national average is still expected.
Read More →Bob Adamsky on Fuel Volatility: “Don’t Panic — Have a Plan”
With oil prices rising again, AWP Safety’s fleet manager shares how to respond to rising fuel costs and how the right strategy can turn fuel spikes into cost-saving opportunities.
Read More →
Oil Market Turbulence Is Complicating Fleet Cost Planning
Rapid swings in crude oil prices driven by the conflict in the Middle East could create longer-term cost pressures for fleets, affecting fuel prices, supply chains, and vehicle strategy, says NTEA’s Andrew Wrobel.
Read More →
February Fuel Update: Prices Inch Higher for Third Week in a Row
The final February fuel update reveals prices continuing to inch higher for the third week in a row.
Read More →