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WASTE: THE OPTIONS |
Could your waste stream be used as a potential source of heat and power?
In the UK, we burn around 4 per cent of our controlled household waste, or about 2.5 million tonnes per year. This includes some top-ups from industry and commerce. |
Municipal Solid Waste incineration
Garden bonfires give off more pollutants than modern incineration plants!
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Nearly all waste-to-energy plants are in local authority hands and these face significant upgrading to meet new standards. Civil engineering and power companies are eyeing this market. Investing in energy-from-waste schemes may make economic sense and appeal companies or regions facing:
Guaranteeing the return from incineration
It can cost from £70 to £1l0m to build a modern incinerator, requiring about 300,000 tonnes of waste per annum to break even. Payback is as much as twenty years, so installers look for certain conditions for the investment to succeed:
an appreciable saving on landfill costs
a predictable market for heat and power
a guaranteed supply of waste to keep the plant burning at maximum capacity
high heat/energy needs
above average landfill costs/ local landfill shortages
above average energy transmission costs
large urban concentrations
How green is modern incineration?
Devotees of incineration insist that it is an environmentally friendly mode of disposal. Their arguments are:
modern technology produces minimal emissions
much ash is recyclable for ferrous metals' recovery, road construction or building materials
cost estimates (net of electricity revenue) suggest burning is competitive with landfill at gate prices of £30 per tonne
burning waste eliminates methane, a ‘greenhouse' gas, produced by landfill
Conclusion: the burning issue
Heat-from-waste schemes may offer the best benefits to regions further from the main electricity and gas generating centres, located in Yorkshire, Humberside, and the Trent valley and the East Coast or those lacking convenient landfill.The introduction of a landfill levy, or the inclusion of energy from waste in the Governments recycling targets, would promote waste incineration as a means of disposal. However, incineration cannot deal with all types of waste and produces up to 30% weight of ash and clinker to be landfilled.
