Environment

Vermont tangled in red tape and knotweed

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In the Netherlands, a design group called Why Knot turns knotweed into lightweight, formaldehyde-free building panels. Vermont’s regulatory system is too antiquated to see it as a win-win.

by Compass Vermont

Japanese knotweed has become one of Vermont’s most visible—and stubborn—invaders. Tall, hollow stems with broad green leaves crowd out native plants, shade out riverbanks, and spread relentlessly each spring. Vermont Public reports it now lines “the banks of every major river in Vermont,” forming a living wall between communities and their waterways.

Getting rid of it isn’t easy or cheap. State and local crews cut and burn it, smother it under plastic for months, or dig it out by the roots—only to see it sprout back the next year.

But what if all that work could produce something useful?

A Win-Win That’s Waiting

In the Netherlands, a design group called Why Knot turns knotweed into lightweight, formaldehyde-free building panels by shredding and heat-pressing the stalks. These boards can be cut and used like plywood. In the U.K., other innovators are pressing it into “bio-concrete” tiles and decorative surfaces.

With knotweed abundant along Vermont’s rivers, the state could do the same—harvesting it during floodplain restoration, heat-treating it to stop its spread, and processing it into panels, acoustic tiles, or landscape edging.

The potential benefits stack up:

  • Healthier rivers – Removing knotweed and replanting with deep-rooted native vegetation stabilizes banks and improves wildlife habitat.
  • More affordable building products – Local panels could help ease the price crunch on plywood and particleboard.
  • New rural jobs – Hot-press panel production is low-energy and fits well in existing small manufacturing spaces.

“It’s one of those rare opportunities where you can solve an environmental problem and create a product people actually need,” says one watershed advocate.


Why It Won’t Happen—Yet

On paper, it’s an easy win. In practice, Vermont’s regulatory system turns it into a marathon. Each rule exists for a reason, but together they almost guarantee nothing happens.

Transport bans: Vermont’s Noxious Weed Rule forbids moving knotweed unless it’s first made “non-viable”—by solarizing, boiling, or grinding—at the harvest site. That’s a logistical and cost hurdle before you even leave the riverbank.

Disposal constraints: Act 148 bans yard debris and clean wood from landfills, so any leftover stalks, fines, or contaminated soil from processing can’t be tossed—only special facilities will take it, and only with proof it’s dead.

River corridor restrictions: The new Flood Safety Act (Act 121) requires permits for most activity in mapped river corridors. That includes staging areas near removal sites—exactly where the plant is thickest.

Air permits for clean tech: Even a resin-free hot-press can be regulated like a wood products factory, requiring costly testing and months of review before production starts.

Agency maze: The knotweed project would touch four separate authorities—the Agency of Agriculture, DEC’s Rivers and Wetlands, solid waste districts, and Air Quality. None have a coordinated process for projects that turn invasives into products.


The Process, Step by Step

1. Identify Knotweed in River Corridor

  • Current: Conservation crews locate dense stands along flood-damaged banks.
  • Barrier: Act 121 requires permits for most work in mapped river corridors, even if the purpose is restoration.
  • Smarter Path: Pre-approved “restoration harvest” template for river corridor permits tied to native replanting plans.

2. Harvest & Contain

  • Current: Workers cut stems; fragments must not touch the ground or water where they can resprout.
  • Barrier: Handling rules are unclear between agencies, leading to inconsistent compliance guidance.
  • Smarter Path: One state-approved harvest protocol, shared by Agriculture and DEC, with step-by-step containment instructions.

3. Kill the Plant Material

  • Current: Noxious Weed Rule requires material to be made non-viable (e.g., solarize, heat, or grind) before transport.
  • Barrier: No standard “mobile kill unit” approved; each project must negotiate its own method with regulators.
  • Smarter Path: State-certified portable heat-treatment/chipper specs that meet the non-viable standard automatically.

4. Transport to Processing Site

  • Current: Must haul in sealed containers after kill-step; enforcement risk if fragments are found.
  • Barrier: No uniform seal or tagging system to verify compliance; paperwork differs by district.
  • Smarter Path: Tag-and-trace system where sealed totes with proof-of-kill travel legally anywhere in-state.

5. Process into Panel Feedstock

  • Current: Milling, drying, and hot-pressing often require air permits under “wood products” rules—even if resin-free.
  • Barrier: Permitting adds months and consulting costs before production starts.
  • Smarter Path: Fast-track permit template for low-HAP, resin-free press operations.

6. Manage Waste & Residues

  • Current: Act 148 bans landfill disposal of yard debris/clean wood; residues must go to limited composters or energy facilities—if they’ll accept it.
  • Barrier: No clear path for non-viable invasive plant waste in solid waste rules.
  • Smarter Path: Written state guidance allowing certified non-viable residues to enter approved disposal or reuse streams.

7. Sell Finished Panels

  • Current: No specific barrier—once the product leaves the factory, it’s treated like any other panel board.
  • Opportunity: Market as Vermont-made, invasive-free, flood-recovery-positive building material.

What Needs to Change

A handful of fixes could make this possible without weakening environmental safeguards:

  • Standard kill-and-transport protocols – A state-approved heat/chip/seal process that automatically meets the non-viable requirement.
  • Clear waste guidance – Rules for certified non-viable plant waste so processors know exactly where it can go.
  • River corridor staging allowances – Pre-approved designs for temporary work areas tied to native replanting.
  • Fast-track air permits – A model permit for low-emission presses that cuts months from the startup timeline.
  • New lawmakers in Montpelier who are seeking to end the intransigence of the dominant party.

The Cost of Standing Still

For now, Vermont will keep paying to remove knotweed only to destroy it, missing the chance to reclaim rivers, cut building costs, and create jobs. The technology exists. The raw material is free. The only missing piece is the will to adjust rules written for a different time.

Until that happens, the state will remain a cautionary tale of how rigid regulations—no matter how well-intended—can strangle clean, innovative solutions before they take root.

Compass Vermont is an independent, native publication focused on a collaborative resource model. This ensures thorough research and reporting that serves every resident, not just specific interest groups.

Publisher Tom Davis, a native Vermonter, is a professional media writer, editor, publisher and owner of digital publications and radio stations. Davis founded Williamsburg-Yorktown Daily (Williamsburg, VA), Port City Daily (Wilmington, NC), Cola Daily (Columbia, SC), and Southside Daily (Virginia Beach, VA).

Before selling the company, the publications enjoyed a readership of over 4 million. Davis founded Compass Vermont in 2020 to provide his home state with a news organization with the same impartial reporting that was the mainstay of his previous publications. He works in partnership with a network of other publishers and a network of content providers who practice the same core beliefs of providing readers with the information they need to form their own decisions, and uses time and resources more efficiently than traditional media models.

Mr. Davis is also the Economic Development Director for the Town of Northfield, Vermont.


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9 replies »

  1. Japanese Knotweed root may dissolve lyme bacteria biofilms. Do your own research. Healing Lyme book by Stephen H Buhner.

    • It’s also edible if harvested early in the season… and it has shown great results in treating Lyme disease (I personally have used it and have no more detectable Lyme in my system.) One of the healing part of this plant is it’s resveratrol which significantly lowers inflammation.

  2. Vermont is strangled in rules and regulations, knot weed is a vicious invader in the northeast Kingdom. It spreads from the tiniest part of the plant carried somewhere else. Another invader in our area is reed grass, which is choking out our pond edges and stream edges everywhere, yet Vermont prohibits activity that will root it out. As the tubers must be dug out to kill it. A neighbor is struggling with these pests and is failing miserably as they are taking over his property.

    • omg thats horrible. If it was on my property i would sell and run far away

  3. I decided to move to VT around 1973. I was amazed how few requirement’s there were to build a house, all common sense, and easy to comply. Then came ACT 250, which I thought would be good. My assessment after living in VT for over half a century is that IT, and the stupid environmental laws that followed, have ruined the VT I chose to be my home state. Sounded great on paper, but what happened? Republicans lost control of the state and now it is a clone of NJ,MA,CT, and the rest of the failing blue states.

  4. In addition to the “may” (or may not, but personal testimonials appear to confirm on the “may” side) benefits of knotweed for Lyme. There is a definite IS fact regarding knotweed: it IS an excellent source of food for honeybees and contributes overall to annual honey crops. Goldenrod used to be a big and late source for bees (still is), but knotweed goes even later than goldenrod and it’s huge in its overall nectar contribution!
    One of many articles regarding its value as a honey crop. Hey, when life gives you knotweed…make honey!
    https://www.honeybeesuite.com/knotty-but-nice-for-bees/

  5. This is a great article, thank you! For a long time now, I’ve been thinking that knotweed could make all sorts of products, including paper! Seems like a win-win for everyone to make usable products from this invasive. Could be looked at as a gift, rather than a pest!