Pōpopo - Jamiema Lorimer | Local Produce

Pōpopo - Jamiema Lorimer | Local Produce

Photo credit: Liam Taylor

Would you still love me if I was a worm? Pōpopo wormporium, the composting initiative of Otago Polytechnic, definitely would. Critic Te Ārohi caught up with Liam Hoffman and his worms to find out more.

Pōpopo is OP’s very own composting facility created to deal with campus’ food waste. The three cafés found on campus, the culinary arts school, and their hall, Te Pā Tauira, are all involved with the initiative, as well as some of OP’s offices and a handful of flats on Harbour Terrace. Their food waste is transformed into compost used to fertilise the vegetable and fruit gardens that are part of OP’s Living Campus, a community garden of produce for its students and staff to use.

A typical day for Liam starts with collecting the buckets of food waste from around campus, then adding these to and turning over the various compost heaps before finally distributing the fertiliser to plant beds around campus. He also has to monitor the quality of the food waste, the health of the worms, and take data on the scale of the initiative. There are various methods of composting at Pōpopo, including hot compost and different styles of worm bins. The hot compost heap sits at a temperature of about 70 degrees Celsius, purely from all the kinetic movement of the bacteria breaking the food down. “That’s just all the bacteria wriggling around. Eating and pooping and fucking, making all the beautiful stuff,” shares Liam.

Pōpopo was started by Finn Boyle, a former student of OP. Initially, he was trialling a small-scale composting operation on campus, as well as advising them on compostable packaging. Eventually this led to OP inviting Finn to do this on a larger scale and creating a paid position for him to do so, and thus Pōpopo was created. Pōpopo was in its planning stages in 2019 and became fully operational in 2021. Last year, Finn handed the position over to Liam: the new King of the Worms.

“The philosophy behind it is there's no such thing as waste, necessarily,” says Liam. “It’s a valuable resource that, with a bit of work, can be turned into awesome stuff that we put on the fruit trees and vegetable beds to feed them.” This philosophy led to Pōpopo processing four tonnes of food waste in and producing over ten cubic metres of compost in 2022. The size of the compost heaps right now, ensure Liam produces about a cubic metre of compost monthly and there’s still opportunity to scale up the operation. “It's cool that the Polytech are actually taking their waste seriously that way. Getting rid of it in a carbon neutral way and actually making good products out of it.”

Pōpopo is rather unique amongst tertiary institutions in Aotearoa. Waikato is the only other campus that has a designated project where worms turn garbage into something digestible: their student magazine, Nexus. Coincidentally they’re also the only other campus with a composting facility.

Pōpopo is an important example of a step institutions can take to be more proactive in attaining sustainability goals. “Every facility or institution should have a version of this,” says Liam. “Whether that’s big or small, depending on the place.”

If you’d like to get involved with Pōpopo, volunteers are always welcome. You can also email compost@op.ac.nz to sign your flat up to contribute your food waste to the cause. You can find Pōpopo located on Union Street, between the OP hall and TCOL. And yes, they would still love you if you were a worm.

This article first appeared in Issue 13, 2023.
Posted 6:17pm Monday 29th May 2023 by Jamiema Lorimer .