• I've heard about the Recovered Energy System™
(RES), recycling Municipal Solid Waste (MSW, household garbage)
into electricity, and ethanol. What is it and how does it work?
— Instead of landfilling or incinerating MSW, this
new facility, using a Plasma Gasification process, converts all
types of waste streams (gas, liquid or solid) into a fuel gas
composed primarily of carbon monoxide, hydrogen, nitrogen and
water. This fuel gas is then used to generate electrical power.
The process is very efficient. 99.9% of the waste that is input
into the system is converted to energy or other salable products.
Typical gasification or incineration plants generate up to 30%
residual waste that must be hauled to a landfill. The Thermal
Transformation process uses a high temperature (up to 8,000 degrees
Fahrenheit.) plasma arc technology to "gasify" carbon
based materials into an energy rich fuel gas with a BTU value
about 1/3 that of natural gas. The fuel gas is then cleaned and
cooled so that it can be used in a gas turbine to generate electricity.
Non carbon based material is primarily transformed into vitrified
glass or recyclable metal.
• Does waste have any value? Is
it a Liability or an Asset?
— Waste is not a liability. It
is one of the most significant and valuable resources we have.
Society has made waste a liability because of the way it has chosen
in the past to handle the waste. The Recovered Energy System™
treats waste as the valuable asset that it is and recovers and
recycles over 99.9% of this valuable asset.
• Isn't this "Plasma Gasification"
process the same as incineration? Does the plasma gasification
process "burn" the waste?
— Incineration is the burning
of carbon based (organic) material in an oxygen-rich environment,
much the same as burning wood in a wood stove. Organic matter
contains energy. The burning process requires a large amount of
oxygen (O2). The carbon contained in the organic matter reacts
with the oxygen to form carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O).
The combustion is highly exothermic and releases the energy in
the organic material in the form of heat. The combustion of the
carbon-based material is incomplete, leaving ash, tar and char
that contains heavy metals and toxic substances requiring it to
be sent to a special landfill. Non carbon based (inorganic) materials
such as metal, glass, soil, concrete, silica, etc. are not affected
by the burning process and become part of the ash. The total unburned
material left over can be as high as 30% by weight. Incineration
results in high levels of tars, furans, NOx, dioxins and sulfur
dioxide, which are expensive to clean from the exhaust.
Plasma Gasification is not incineration and it does
not burn the waste. It is the transformation of
carbon based material in an oxygen-starved environment using an
external high heat source (plasma) to produce a fuel gas (also
called a syngas) that can be used in other applications. Even
though the temperatures are much higher than with incineration,
the organic material does not burn because there is not enough
oxygen. The process controls the amount of oxygen and allows only
enough oxygen to form carbon monoxide. The organic matter is transformed
to a fuel gas composed of carbon monoxide (CO) and hydrogen (H2).
Only a small amount of energy is released when the carbon and
oxygen molecules combine. The carbon monoxide still contains substantial
chemical energy and can be used in a variety of ways. The high
temperatures of the Plasma Gasification process melt metals, glass,
silica, soil, etc., which flow out of the bottom of the reactor.
The metals are recycled and the other inorganic materials become
vitrified (molten) glass. Because of the high temperatures and
lack of oxygen there are no tars, dioxins or furans and Nox and
Sox are much lower. The net result is that all the waste is not
converted to salable products.
• What is Plasma?
— Plasma is a gas that is essentially
ionized, superheated air. A special plasma torch heats regular
air to internal temperatures (inside the torch) as high as 25,000
degrees Fahrenheit and external temperatures (point of contact
with the material) as high as 8,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The source
of energy for the torch is electricity. The superheated air is
used to thermally decompose whatever it comes in contact with.
Steel foundries have used plasma to smelt steel for many years.
Plasma is a well-established technology in many industries.
• What is the difference between
Plasma Gasification and standard gasification?
— Standard gasification technologies
operate the reactor in the 700 - 1500 degrees Fahrenheit. range.
They do not use any external heat source and rely on the process
itself to sustain the reaction. Normal gasifiers are really "partial
combustors" and a substantial portion of the carbon is combusted
just to support the reaction. Their gasification process produces
a fuel gas similar to the gas produced by the plasma process,
although it is much dirtier and contains char and tars. The lower
temperatures cannot break down all the materials. With standard
gasification many materials must be sorted out of the waste stream
before the reactor and landfilled or processed in other ways.
Because of the low temperature used, the gas that is produced
by a standard gasifier has tars that are difficult to remove and
other contaminants that must be further cleaned up. Char residue
remains that is up to 15% of the weight of the incoming material
and must still be landfilled. In addition to these drawbacks,
most standard gasification systems cannot feed MSW directly from
the truck. The refuse must be dried to an acceptable moisture
content, and processed into a uniform size and consistency further
adding to the cost and complexity.
Plasma gasification uses an external heat source to gasify the
waste, resulting in very little combustion. Almost all of the
carbon is converted to fuel gas. Plasma gasification is the closest
technology available to pure gasification and is a "true
gasifier". Because of the temperatures involved all the tars,
char and dioxins are broken down. The exit gas from the reactor
is cleaner and there is no ash at the bottom of the reactor. The
Plasma gasifier can process any type of waste, does not require
sorting and is not impacted operationally by moisture
• Why hasn't Plasma Gasification
been done before?
— Plasma gasification has been
used in the steel, wood and other industries for many years. A
general abundance of inexpensive electrical power and ample landfills
have limited the commercial viability of this technology for MSW.
There are a large number plasma gasification MSW plants in operation
throughout the world in various industries. Several plasma gasification
plants are in operation in North America operating on hazardous
waste. With the demand for energy always on the rise, closures
of landfills and the high cost of opening new ones, the time has
come for our Recovered Energy System™ using plasma technology
to come to the forefront.
• What is "Fuel Gas"
and what is it's the Btu value?
— "Fuel Gas" is the
name used to refer to the gas coming from the organic waste out
of the reactor and used to fuel the gas turbine. It is composed
mostly of carbon monoxide and hydrogen and has a Btu value of
320 Btu per cubic foot, or about 1/3 the Btu value of methane
(natural gas). When combined with the nitrogen and water in the
gas stream, the fuel gas has an overall Btu value of about 160
Btu per cubic foot. This can vary someone depending on the feedstock
and moisture content.
• Are there gas turbines that will
operate on such low Btu gas?
— Yes. Many of the turbine manufacturers
have designed turbines specifically for low Btu syngas. In fact,
the same turbine rated for methane at X MW will have a higher
MW rating with syngas.
• Is the electricity produced by
plasma gasification "green electricity"?
— Green electricity is defined
as electricity produced from renewable sources. Typically we think
of solar, wind and geothermal power when we think of renewable
energy. However, MSW and other wastes renew themselves (with our
help) and the energy produced from waste is green electricity.
There are several companies that market green electricity. They
generally do not market power from incinerators because of the
negative environmental impact and bad reputation of incinerators.
However, plasma gasification does not have the negative impact
of incinerators and will eventually be sold by the distributors
of green electricity.
• Doesn't the plant generate carbon
dioxide? Does this carbon dioxide contribute to the greenhouse
effect?
— When the CO goes through the
gas turbine it is combined with more oxygen and energy is released.
The CO becomes CO2 or carbon dioxide. Coal, diesel and natural
gas power plants produce CO2 and contribute to the greenhouse
effect. These power plants are using petroleum based fuels that
are introducing new CO2 into the environment. The Recovered Energy
System™ does not contribute to the greenhouse effect because
it does not use new hydrocarbons as a fuel source. Our process
simply releases CO2 that was already part of the base of organic
material.
• How much energy is contained
in waste?
— The United States produced 230
million tons of MSW in 1999. Industrial non-hazardous waste added
another 7.6 billion tons. Medical waste and hazardous waste also
add significant volumes of waste. If just the MSW were converted
into electricity using our process it would generate over 30,000
mWh of electricity or an amount equal to more than 15 large coal
fired power plants. For a plant processing 126 tons of waste per
hour, more than 135 megawatts per hour of "green" power
will be produced. After powering it's own needs this pant would
export 1 megawatt for each ton of waste processed.
• How will a Recovered Energy System™
plant affect the local citizens and the environment?
— The Recovered Energy System™
is very environmentally sensitive recycling process. It will provide
a long-term solution for disposing of residential, commercial,
and industrial wastes. It will stabilize disposal fees, eliminate
the threat of pollution associated with landfills or incineration.
At the same time it will create jobs and provide a long-term income
to the municipalities it serves.
• How can you call this process
recycling?
— The American Heritage dictionary
defines recycling as the extraction and reuse of useful substances
found in waste. The Recovered Energy System™ is the ultimate
form of recycling. Over 99.9% of the waste processed is recycled
into other products and energy that can be reused. This is all
done with no sorting and less effort.
• What types of waste can be processed?
— The Recovered Energy System™
can process any type of waste with the same environmental cleanliness
and complete breakdown and recycling efficiency. No pre-treating,
sorting, or extra handling is required. Household garbage, yard
waste, glass, incinerator ash, oil waste sludges, plastics, paints,
contaminated soils, tires, etc. can all be processed and recycled.
• Can the plant process hazardous
waste?
— The same technology can, with
only procedural and permitting changes safely and profitably process
hazardous waste. Hazardous waste will be processed only after
proper permits can be obtained. Waste that is classified "Hazardous"
will not be permitted to be processed with "non-hazardous"
materials as they are handled in a completely different manner.
Strict rules and guidelines will be enforced that prevent haulers
from delivering hazardous materials, unless the facility is permitted
for this type of waste. The Recovered Energy System™ will
process and recycle a far greater range of wastes than were previously
possible. Hard to dispose of items such as tires, used oil, oil
contaminated soils, auto shredder residue, coal fines, incinerator
ash, most construction and demolition waste, even metal and glass
will be recycled.
• Where will the plant be located?
— The plant can be located at
any site that has adequate services and access. No visual evidence
will be present that will indicate that garbage and waste is processed.
• Will there be any odors from
the plant?
— The receiving area for all of
the refuse is enclosed and kept at a negative pressure. The air
required for the process is pulled through the receiving and storage
areas thereby pulling the odors into the gasifier. The off-hours
storage is contained inside a building and is cycled every 3-4
days. Only enough material is stored to operate the plant when
it is not accepting wastes, such as at night and weekends. Odors
are first minimized and then contained and processed along with
the waste.
• What happens if the facility
breaks down or doesn't work properly?
— At no time will the municipality
or citizens be affected by scheduled or unscheduled shutdowns.
Many operational contingencies and procedures are engineered into
the facility design. These contingency plans are reviewed and
approved by the local waste management authority. This ensures
that waste and all byproducts are handled properly should any
unforeseen events occur that cause the plant to go off-line. Also
the turbines are set up so that they can run on natural gas if
there is a problem with the waste plant.
• Who watches over the facility
to ensure it is operated in an environmentally responsible manner?
— In addition to the regulatory
agencies that the facility is subject to, a community advisory
group, consisting of local residents will be formed to monitor
the plants activities. This group will be funded by the facility
and will monitor all operations and environmental compliance.
Further, all emissions compliance data will be available on-line
on a web page hosted by the company.
• How will the facility get its
waste?
— The facility will receive waste
in the same manner as a landfill or transfer station. Municipalities
will still be responsible to pickup waste and haul it to the facility
or negotiate with private haulers for this service. The participating
municipalities will sign waste contracts for a negotiated period
to bring the waste to the facility and pay a negotiated tipping
fee. Where possible the plant could be located on a rail line
or a shore line to receive waste by barge.
• Won't we lose the income and
positive environmental impact from the recycling program that
we now have?
— For some items the collecting
and sorting out of the "recyclable" item such as glass
and metal costs more than the income that is realized by the sale
of such materials. The Recovered Energy SystemTM is a more efficient
"recycling" method. We do not, however, discourage traditional
recycling programs. We simply offer the municipality an option
to decide which items to recycle traditionally and which to send
unsorted to the facility for 100% recycling into energy or useful
by products.
• What risks are there if this
plant is built in my town?
— The facility does not create
any new waste streams and all emissions are closely monitored.
The design of the plant incorporates the latest technologies for
modern storage tanks, containment systems and fire control systems.
Modern control systems assure safe operation and proper reaction
in the event of an upset. Risks are actually much lower than the
risks of conventional landfills.
