Waste To Energy System Breaks Down Garbage Without Incinerating It
By on
May 27th, 2009
Houston-based Waste Management, a giant waste company,announced a joint venture with InEnTec to commercialize and develop large-scale plasma-gasification facilities, which will generate energy and fuel from waste commonly trashed in landfills.
Waste Management will fund the new venture, which will be called S4 Energy Solutions, as well as provide infrastructure and expertise from its waste-collecting and -processing businesses to make the technology economical. The company, which will operate and market plasma-gasification technologies, will be announcing specific projects to build facilities later this year.
The involvement of Waste Management could signal that the technology, which has been more expensive than other waste-disposal options, is finally reaching a stage at which it can be practical. “Up until late last year, it was under the radar,” says James Childress, the executive director of the Gasification Technologies Council. “Now the big players are finally getting involved in this.”
InEnTec’s technology, originally developed at MIT and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, in Richland, WA, uses a multiple high-temperature processes–including subjecting garbage to plasma arcs–to break down organic materials into syngas, a mixture of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. Syngas can either be directly burned in gas turbines to produce electricity, or it can be converted into other fuels, including ethanol and gasoline.
Metals and other inorganic materials in garbage can be isolated and recycled. The combination of high temperatures and an oxygen-poor environment that prevents the garbage from catching fire eliminates the production of dioxins and furans, two toxic chemicals produced during incineration.
That core technology has been proved, says Joseph Vaillancourt, managing director at Waste Management and the senior vice president of the new joint venture. What’s kept it from being commercialized, he says, is the need to develop the processes for economically collecting and feeding waste into the system, and on the “back end” pairing the syngas produced with gas turbines for generating electricity, or other chemical processes for converting it into fuels.
Vaillancourt says that Waste Management has already developed infrastructure for collecting and processing waste and for using heat from incinerators for generating electricity, and it will employ its “knowledge and wherewithal” to develop an “integrated system” using InEnTec’s technology.
S4 Energy Solutions plans to market the first gasification units in specialized markets such as those concerned with the disposal of automobile shredder residue or medical waste, for which landfills often aren’t an option, hence companies are willing to pay more to dispose of waste.
Eventually, they could be used more generally for municipal solid waste, especially in rural towns and small cities that do not produce enough waste for cheaper incinerator technologies to be practical. The technology has the benefit of allowing customers to generate some of their own electricity, which could make it more affordable.
Source: Technologyreview


Jan says:
May 31st, 2009 at 3:04 pm
Wait and investigate first!!! InEnTec was pressured out of tiny Red Bluff, California by 22 hours of hearings by the Tehama County Air Pollution Control Hearing Board after expert testimony revealed that InEnTec’s tests for being “pollution free” proved unfounded, that it had FIVE places in the plant design that could produce “fugitive emissions” of dioxins, heavy metals and other pollutants into the atmosphere. They proposed to build it near roads, a river, a hospital, school and daycare. The PEM machine heats stuff to 1000 degrees, and is not “closed loop” as it claims. They don’t have a successful plant anywhere, contrary to their claims. Communities beware!
Alternative Energy News says:
June 29th, 2009 at 8:53 am
Toronto has a big problem with their garbage. (hate to say but they ship the garbage to US), they should look into this technology!
Mazen Rahahleh says:
August 3rd, 2009 at 5:24 am
I am Lt Col Mazen Rahahleh, Staff Officer Engineer, (Water- Sanitation- Environment)
UNMIS, Khartoum-Engineering Section, Please If possible, provide us with information about Incinerators with:
Capacity 3000 kg/day.
Working Hours 4-6 Hours/Day
Waste to energy system – WTE.
Kind of waste. (Solid waste, Domestic waste, Food waste, Plastic waste).
Types of incineration (Chamber, Rotary kiln , Moved bed , Moving grate)
Thank you and With Best Regards,
……..
\Lt Col Mazen Rahahleh
Staff Officer Engineer
Water- Sanitation- Environment
UNMIS, Khartoum-Engineering Section
Cell phone: +249 913799658
Intermission Extn: 190 9580
e-mail: rahahleh@un.org
mazen77101@yahoo.com
mazen77101@hotmail.com
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
Please take the measures and controls to prevent damage and degradation of the environment,
including the sustainability of its living resources
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