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Turning Vegetation Waste into Opportunity

September 4, 2025

Turning Vegetation Waste into Opportunity

By Aana Agrawal, Sustainability and Resilience Manager, EnviroScience

The utility vegetation management (UVM) sector plays a crucial role in ensuring the smooth transmission of power across regions and cities by keeping plant growth under control within the vicinity of transmission and distribution lines. However, unrefined vegetation maintenance practices often focus on trimming, cleaning, and disposal processes that generate an unnecessary amount of organic waste, aid in releasing greenhouse gases, and fail to maximize community and ecological value. With sustainability being a focus for utility companies, vegetation waste is now viewed as more than just a byproduct of discarding, but more as a valuable resource.

Understanding the Circular Economy

Circular economy is a systems-based approach that focuses on reducing waste, improving resource efficiency, and making more sustainable alternatives to the dominant linear model of “take, make, dispose.” In reference to vegetation management, one would ask: How can tree trimmings, brush, and biomass be given a new life or be transformed into inputs for new value streams rather than being sent to landfills or left to decay? To understand this better, let’s first understand the different types of vegetation waste in UVM:

  • Tree branches and limbs from pruning
  • Whole trees uprooted for hazard mitigation
  • Vines and undergrowth roots cleared from rights-of-way
  • Leaves and other organic debris

This biomass, often viewed as waste and a byproduct of necessary operations, has immense potential when processed and redirected appropriately.

Path to Circularity: Waste to Value

  1. Mulching and Composting. One of the simplest and most valuable uses for tree residue is to convert it into mulch or compost. Wood chips can be repurposed in community gardens, public parks, and landscape designs, aiding soil enrichment and weed suppression. Composting organic residue not only conserves methane emissions that would be produced if discarded in landfills but also returns nutrients to the ground. One of the largest power and gas distributors in the United States has a long history of vegetation management, where they repurpose wood waste as mulch. In collaboration with local communities, the California utility delivers wood chips from trimmings directly to residents, farmers, and city landscaping at no cost. For instance, in Sonoma County, wood chips have been distributed to vineyards across the state for erosion control and soil enhancement. The initiative has diverted thousands of tons of organic material from landfills annually, supporting both environmental and community resilience goals.
  2. Biochar Production. Biochar is a form of charcoal produced by pyrolyzing biomass in the absence of oxygen. When used in soil, biochar enhances soil fertility, sequesters carbon, and improves water retention. Utility companies can collaborate with biochar producers to divert biomass for this purpose. For instance, in Northern California, the same utility also partnered with Sonoma Biochar Initiative and local agencies to convert hazardous vegetation from utility line clearings into biochar. This effort aimed to reduce wildfire risks by responsibly removing excess biomass while producing biochar for use on local vineyards, farms, and rangelands.
  3. Biomass Energy Generation. Vegetation waste can also be used as a feedstock for biomass power plants, producing renewable energy from what would otherwise be discarded. This is particularly valuable in rural or forested regions where vegetation waste is abundant, and grid infrastructure may benefit from decentralized power generation.
  4. Habitat Creation and Erosion Control. Logs, brush, and wood debris can be used to create wildlife habitats, restore wetlands, and reduce erosion on slopes and near waterways. This not only diverts material from waste streams and landfills but also supports local biodiversity. For instance, in the Pacific Northwest, utility ROWs are being managed to support pollinator habitats by reintroducing native shrubs, plants, trees, and using cleared wood to form brush poles for small mammals and birds.
  5. Artisanal and Community Use. Community organizations and local artisans collect wood from utility tree removals to make furniture, sculptures, or building materials. This adds cultural and economic value to otherwise discarded resources. Utility companies can maintain a record or build a database of available materials and connect with local communities and organizations to get involved with reuse programs.

Implementing Circular Strategies: Key Considerations

Partnerships and Stakeholder Engagement: Establishing circular pathways requires collaboration with local governments, nonprofits, recyclers, and entrepreneurs. Stakeholder mapping and partnership frameworks are essential to create mutually beneficial value chains.

Logistics and Infrastructure: Collection, processing, and distribution systems must be in place to transport vegetation waste to its next use. This may include mobile chippers, local drop-off sites, or contracts with third-party processors.

Policy and Incentives: Regulatory support and incentives can encourage utilities to divert vegetation waste from landfills. Green procurement policies and carbon credit programs can also make circular practices financially viable.

Training and Awareness: Field crews and vegetation planners need to understand the goals and practices of circular UVM. Training modules, toolkits, and incentives can support behavior change at the ground level.

Tracking and Reporting: Quantifying diverted biomass, carbon saved, and community benefit is vital for accountability and continuous improvement. Digital tools and GIS mapping can help track waste flows and identify optimization opportunities.

Benefits of Circular Vegetation Management

  • Environmental: Diverts and reduces waste going to the landfills, reduces greenhouse gas emissions, enhances biodiversity, and promotes soil health.
  • Social: Supports community gardening, brings awareness, and enhances education and engagement.
  • Economic: Lowers disposal costs, opens revenue streams, and enhances brand value through sustainable leadership.

Looking Ahead

With the advent of climate change and the increasing rise of sustainability expectations from all industries, utility companies and arborist teams must embrace creativity and innovation. Circular economy-focused strategies in vegetation management offer a way to balance operational efficiency with environmental stewardship. From electric saws to biomass mapping to community codesign, there are necessary tools, frameworks, and standards available for organizations to use. It is now up to organizations to frame vision and goals, develop leadership, and commit to seeing vegetation waste not as an endpoint, but as the beginning of something creative and valuable.

EnviroScience, part of the ACRT Services family of companies, works alongside utility companies and communities to design and implement circular vegetation management strategies that align operational needs with sustainability goals. By transforming UVM waste into opportunities, EnviroScience believes the utility industry can become a powerful agent of circularity, resilience, and regeneration.

Looking ahead, let us not waste the waste – instead, let’s chip away at old habits and build a greener future, one brand at a time.

This article was originally published in the 2025 September/October edition of the UAA Newsline.