Italian Company Could Change the Way W.Va. Looks at Waste

Landfilling has been the main source of getting rid of waste for centuries. But a new technology coming to West Virginia may change how we think of waste disposal, and in the long run, help our environment.

Entsorga is an Italian resource recovery company that has been around since 1997. About four years ago, the Berkeley County Solid Waste Authority was looking for ways to promote a cleaner environment and find a safer and more efficient way to dispose of waste. …Entsorga ended up finding them.

After three years of waiting, Entsorga received approval from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection to begin constructing a new resource recovery facility later this year on property owned by the Berkeley County Solid Waste Authority. The facility will take anywhere from 65 to 75 percent of the refuse they collect and turn it into fuel instead of putting it in the ground.

“Essentially what you take waste, and you use it as a resource or you use to make energy,” said Clint Hogbin, the chairman of the Berkeley County Solid Waste Authority, “This is garbage that will be picked up on the street, no differently then it’s being picked up today. And instead of the truck going to a landfill, the truck will go to a 4 acre building, and unload its waste inside of a building, where mechanical equipment, electro-mechanical equipment will sort and process that waste and prepare it to be used for fuel.”

The Berkeley County facility will be the first Entsorga plant in the country and the first resource recovery facility in West Virginia using a technology called HeBIOT.

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Acreage just behind the Berkeley County Solid Waste Authority’s main office. The Entsorga facility will be built just beyond this fence.

HeBIOT is an acronym. It stands for high-efficiency biological treatment, and it’s a patented technology, patent by Entsorga,” Hogbin said, “It uses the biology of waste if you will, the decomposition of waste, to prepare the waste to be used for a fuel.”

Hogbin says while there are other resource recovery facilities in the United States, this facility is the only one that will use the HeBIOT technology. The waste is turned into a confetti-like material by use of high-tech machines operated by humans within a clean room. The material is then dried and can be burned for fuel and used as a replacement for some non-renewable resources like coal. And that’s what Hogbin says may keep the state from embracing the new fueling system.

“We were worried about there being some concern, particularly from downstate, about the impact on coal, because this would be competing with coal,” Hogbin noted.

With the push from the federal government to reduce carbon emission, however, Hogbin says recycling refuse is a viable option for not just West Virginia, but the entire country.

Credit Liz McCormick / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Clint Hogbin, chairman of the Berkeley County Solid Waste Authority, stands in the field soon to be under construction.

“Emissions from burning of this material has been studied. It’s been studied by Entsorga. It’s also been studied by the United States Environmental Protection Agency who literally sent this board a letter, advising us their opinion of burning this material was significantly lower or equal to the emissions of burning coal.”

Entsorga has an agreement with another Italian company called Essroc, also located in Berkeley County. The confetti-like material produced at the Entsorga plant, will be sent to Essroc, where this fuel will be used to power the plant that makes cement.

Apple Valley Waste Services will also play a role by providing Entsorga with the garbage it will use to make the fuel.

Hogbin says once the Entsorga facility is up-and-running, it would employ around 12 people, with salaries ranging from forty to sixty-thousand dollars a year.

New EPA Rules Still Unclear to W.Va. Officials

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed new carbon-emission rules Monday that aim to cut carbon dioxide releases from coal fired power plants. The overall national target is a reduction of 30 percent by 2030 compared to 2005 levels.

State officials say they’re still working to understand what the 600-plus page document really means for West Virginia, but for now, many are claiming the bad outweighs the good and are pledging to do everything they can to stop it.

What state officials do understand about these draft regulations so far is that they are different than anything the EPA has proposed in the past.

In September, the agency released a proposal to reduce carbon emissions from newly constructed power plants. Monday’s proposal, however, doesn’t focus on the individual facility. Instead, it sets carbon dioxide standards for the state as a whole.

“What EPA is saying is that by 2030, overall West Virginia’s total CO2 emission rate, which is pounds of CO2 per kilowatt hour that we generate, has to be 1620 or less,” said West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Randy Huffman.

He explained to meet the EPA’s new standard, West Virginia would have to reduce its CO2 emissions by 15 percent compared to 2012 measurements, the latest available.

Huffman said there are some efficiencies to be found within coal fired power plants themselves, but not enough to meet the reduction standard.

“Knowing how much energy we produce by coal, knowing what the coal CO2 numbers are now,” he said, “it’s going to require a significant reduction in the combustion of coal and a replacement of that by some other energy source.”

An option is to switch from coal to natural gas, an industry that happens to be rapidly growing in the Northern Panhandle and North Central portions of the state, but Huffman said just switching to natural gas won’t do enough. West Virginia will have to go even further to reduce their emissions under the new rule.

Other options set out in the EPA’s plan include things like energy efficiency, investing in renewable energy and making power plant upgrades, but it can also include offering discounts to consumers in exchange for shifting their energy consumption to off-peak hours.
 

“We appreciate that the EPA is giving our state some flexibility to design an implementation plan,” Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said during a press conference Monday, “but based on the briefings we’ve had, these proposals appear to realize some of our worst fears.”

“The bottom line is the only way to comply with these rules is to use less West Virginia coal.”

Tomblin said his administration will do everything they can to block the rules, but will continue working with EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy to mitigate the impacts he said communities in West Virginia will feel as a result.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey said his office is looking at the legalities of the rules, calling it an overreach of federal power.

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