townswill
Townswill is a term used in discussions of urban waste to describe the organic portion of a town's municipal waste stream, including household food scraps, market and street food waste, and yard or green waste collected by city services. It is considered in planning and policy contexts when assessing potential for recycling, composting, digestion, or energy recovery. The concept emphasizes the municipal scale, rather than individual households, and is sometimes used to illustrate the volume and characteristics of waste that can be diverted from landfills.
Etymology and usage: Townswill is a portmanteau of town and swill. The term is not part of
Applications: Analysts may use the concept to estimate biogas potential, composting capacity, or revenue from waste-to-energy
Limitations and reception: Because "townswill" lacks a standardized definition, it can be ambiguous and hinder comparisons
See also: Municipal solid waste, organic waste, composting, anaerobic digestion, waste-to-energy, circular economy, recycling rates.