Hair mats used in oil spill cleanup, like all traditional cleanup materials are incinerated or landfilled by hazmat teams. In 2002, Matter of Trust and Fungi.com joined forces to do lab research on—if fungus could breakdown mats made from human hair soaked in toxic oil. The goal was to remediate the oil spill waste and create landscape-grade compost to be sold as a special one time project with Cosco – thanks to a Patagonia grant.
Paul Stamets of Fungi.com,“The roots of mushrooms, called mycelium, produce enzymes that unlock wood fibers, which are composed of strings of carbon-hydrogen molecules in the form of cellulose and lignin. Most petroleum products are held together by similar molecular bonds. This study tests if mushroom mycelium breaks these bonds, and then reconstructs the oil into carbohydrates, fungal sugars that make up the mushroom’s physical structures.”
In 2007, we decided to test this in the field when an oil spill occurred in SF Bay. The Cosco Busan container ship hit the Bay Bridge and spilled 53,569 gallons (202,780 liters ) of bunker fuel which came ashore within hours onto Ocean Beach.
PROCESS
SF Oil Spill Remediation Project Overview
Fungi + Oily Hair Treatability Study Part I
Thermophilic Composting of Oily Hair Study Part II
Vermiculture (worms) Composting of Oily Hair Study Part III
Conclusion: This is a labor of love. In the Amazon where there are people living with oil pits that resulted from pipeline leak, debris was left there for decades. We believe this is a worthwhile and empowering solution. For shoreline cities with little landfill space or time, this is impractical and hazardous waste is better incinerated for energy in a closed system that takes care of particulates.