Skip to main content

Site Banner Ads

Site Search

Search

Home Up Here Publishing

Mobile Toggle

Social Links

Facebook Instagram

Search Toggle

Search

Main navigation

  • Magazines
    • Latest Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Up Here Business
    • Visitor Guides
    • Move Up Here
  • Sections
    • People & Places
    • Arts & Lifestyle
    • History & Culture
    • Travel & Tourism
    • Nature & Science
    • Northern Jobs
  • Newsletter
  • Community Map
  • Merch
  • Our Team
  • Support
  • Subscribe/Renew

NOTY Shortlist: The Composter

December 2015

One composter's "organic residuals" are Garret Gillespie's treasure.

By Eva Holland

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. NOTY Shortlist: The Composter

Garret Gillespie points to a heaping, ragged pile of dirt and shredded plastic. “This is the problem,” he says. “This is the economic problem right here.” The pile is what’s known in the composting business as “organics residuals.” It's the leavings after the rich black earth—“the good stuff people buy”—has been removed. Cities with large-scale compost programs the world over have discovered a shared problem: only half of what residents dump in their compost bins actually comes out the other end as usable soil. The rest is contaminated with plastic, unusable—and because the residuals are partly organic, they’re not normally allowed in landfills either.

That’s where Gillespie comes in. With support from Cold Climate Innovation at the Yukon Research Centre, he’s spent the past three years developing a machine that separates the plastic from the rest. “It takes that”—Gillespie points to the pile of residuals—“and turns it into this”: a clean pile of material that looks like wood chips. It’s not the same as the dark soil sought after by gardeners, but it’s perfect to be re-used as carbon at the front end of the composting process. “You can’t compost without it,” he says. Composters would normally have to buy wood chips to mix in with the materials collected from compost bins, but Gillespie’s machine turns their own unmanageable waste into a free wood-chip substitute.

The machine, officially dubbed a “method and apparatus for separating plastic from compost and other recyclable materials,” is more than 99% effective, and it received its Canadian and U.S. patents this year. There’s nothing else like it: it’s “totally novel,” Gillespie says. He has been fielding calls from all over the world about his invention, but he’s a patient worker. “I’m not interested in trying to rush something and make a mess of it.” His next step is to build a new model, an official prototype that incorporates all the lessons he learned working on the current iteration. And then? Hopefully, he’ll change the way we compost, cutting down waste worldwide.

December 2015

The Sound of Silence

Summoning the ghosts of a Yellowknife mall

By Samia Madwar

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

December 2015

Downtown Cambridge Bay at the end of December. Photo by Herb Mathisen/Up Here

Fireworks in a Blizzard

New Year's Eve in Cambridge Bay

By Herb Mathisen

Downtown Cambridge Bay at the end of December. Photo by Herb Mathisen/Up Here

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

Related Articles

Tear Sheet

-----

Looking Ahead – The Mackenzie Bicentennial

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

UP HERE - NOV/DEC 2025

-----

Heavy Lifting

Sorry, guys. You’ve gotta step back. This loader is for women only 

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

UP HERE - NOV/DEC 2025

Photo by Dustin Patar

Arctic Moment: Close Call

Location: 80 kilometres north of Iqaluit

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

Tear Sheet

Photos by Sam Toman

Miner Hockey

Yellowknife was a different place in the 1950's and '60s. There wasn't always much to do to pass the long winter months. So when local miners got together to play hockey, the whole town would turn out. 

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

UP HERE - NOV/DEC 2025

Photos courtesy of APTN, CBC, Netflix/Jasper Savage

Anna Lambe Has Something To Say

Nunavut’s new film and TV star is one of the most eloquent and empathetic voices for young Inuit—and Up Here’s Northerner of the Year

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025

Tear Sheet

Photo by Pat Kane

Casts for Fame

He's Yellowlmife's Fishin' Technician, landing lunker trout and charming the pants off VIP visitors. Now if only he could make his mark.

December 18th, 2025 December 18th, 2025
Newsletter sign-up promo image.

Stay in Touch.

Our weekly newsletter brings all the best circumpolar stories right to your inbox.

Up Here magazine cover

Subscribe Now

Our magazine showcases award-winning writing and spectacular northern photos.

Subscribe

Footer Navigation

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimers & Legal

Contact Information

Up Here Publishing
P.O Box 1343
Yellowknife, NT
X1A 2N9  Canada
Email: info@uphere.ca

Social Links

Facebook Instagram
Funded by the Government of Canada