The Southeastern Public Service Authority (SPSA) in Hampton Roads is implementing an AI and robotics-powered waste sorting facility in Portsmouth that could cut landfill waste by 50%. The facility represents a major pivot for SPSA after losing its primary revenue source when the Navy stopped purchasing steam in 2023 and a catastrophic fire destroyed the Wheelabrator facility.
What you should know: The new mixed-waste sorting system uses artificial intelligence and image recognition to identify and remove recyclable and organic materials before they reach landfills.
- The technology can pull out approximately 50% of materials from the waste stream, extending landfill life well into 2060.
- Commonwealth Sortation Technologies operates the facility, which is already running a pilot program processing about 25 tons of waste per hour on Victory Boulevard in Portsmouth.
- The full-scale site will handle 350,000 tons of waste annually once the contract is finalized.
Why this matters: Hampton Roads communities currently recycle only 6.8% of their waste on average, leaving significant room for improvement in waste diversion.
- SPSA expects the new process to raise recycling rates to 20% by capturing materials that residents often miss, including 26% of the waste stream that still contains recyclables even after blue bin collection.
- The remaining organic waste will be converted into biochar, a carbon-rich material that can be sold to other businesses.
The big picture: This technology shift addresses both environmental responsibility and economic necessity for the region’s waste management system.
- “We got six proposals back and we decided to elect two of those to move forward with negotiations, so we’re very close to finalizing a contract to do mixed waste sorting,” said SPSA Executive Director Dennis Bagley.
- The AI-driven approach eliminates the need for human workers to manually sort through trash, addressing both safety and labor concerns.
What they’re saying: SPSA leadership emphasizes that technology alone won’t solve the waste crisis without community participation.
- “We gotta begin to look at what citizens can do to help themselves, and although it appears to be a small amount to a big problem, but when you combine everything together, it makes a big difference,” Bagley said.
- “People get used to us just taking the waste and doing something with it; they don’t know where it goes,” he added. “We’re not stopping at 50%. Our next step is to look at the other 50% and find out how we’re going to reduce that even lower.”
Looking ahead: SPSA advocates for extended producer responsibility (EPR) legislation that would require manufacturers to reduce packaging waste and design more recyclable products.
- “It takes a lot of support in order to make that happen; extended producer responsibility is a big deal,” Bagley noted.
- While EPR policies are gaining traction in northern and western states, Virginia has not yet adopted such legislation.
SPSA turns to AI and robotics to cut landfill waste in half across Hampton Roads