Draft 1 - Canadian Plastics Industry Association

Oct. 5, 2011
FINAL
Groundbreaking Waste-to-Biofuels Facility – Turning Garbage into Fuels
Toronto, ON, Oct. 5, 2011 – Imagine a world where our garbage actually powers the vehicles
we drive. An untapped source of energy. Energy that would cut greenhouse gas emissions by
80%.
This is the world that’s starting to take shape in Edmonton Alberta at Edmonton’s Waste-toBiofuels Facility and Advanced Energy Research Facility. Unique technology, developed by
Enerkem, can turn residual waste (remaining after recycling and composting) into advanced
biofuels, paving the way for a new generation of clean fuels and energy.
Instead of occupying space in landfills, our waste is now becoming a clean power source for
our cars, trucks and buses. Diverting waste also reduces methane gas from landfills – a far
more potent greenhouse gas than CO2.
At the Edmonton Waste Management Centre on Oct. 5, 2011, 200 industry, government, and media
were able to see the innovative technology that is producing alternative fuels and chemical feedstocks
by converting non-recycled plastics and biomass.
The educational tour was sponsored by the Canadian Plastics Industry Association (CPIA), the
American Chemistry Council and Alberta Plastics Recycling Association in Association with the Annual
Conference of the Recycling Council of Alberta and with the support of the City of Edmonton and the
Edmonton Centre of Excellence.
“This event highlights the fact that there are now technologies in use in North America that allow us to
treat waste as a resource” says CPIA President Greg Wilkinson.
According to Wilkinson, “We hope to demonstrate that proactively managing residual materials within
the context of an integrated system means we can find new uses for non-recycled plastics while on the
road to steadily increasing landfill diversion. These technologies may include the conversion of solid
waste to biofuels and chemicals and/or re-capturing the energy from waste for electricity and heating.”
Edmonton is unique in North America as it hosts one of the few fully integrated waste management
facilities on the continent. The operation is expected to help the city increase its residential landfill
waste diversion rate from 60% to 90% - a tremendous municipal success story.
The educational tour demonstrated leading-edge waste management technologies – from recycling to
solid waste recovery – and showed how they can co-exist in an environmentally and economically
sustainable way.
According to CPIA Vice President Cathy Cirko, “We hope to repudiate the old saying, “Garbage in,
garbage out,” so that in the future we are working within a plastics recycling paradigm focused on the
principle of “Garbage in, resource out.”
The Canadian Plastics Industry Association showcases initiatives such as the Edmonton Waste-toBiofuels and Advanced Energy Research facility, designed to divert residual material including nonrecyclable plastics from landfill. At the end of their life plastics can have valuable future roles, as an
energy source or to be reprocessed into other products. Plastics are too valuable to waste and
initiatives and partnerships such as this one are a prime example of what can and is being done to
divert plastics and other materials from landfill.
Information about Waste-To-Biofuels Process:
The Waste-to-Biofuels process:
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The residue materials are shredded and fed into a gasifier.
The gasification process converts carbon-rich residues into a syngas.
The syngas is cleaned and converted into high-value, market-ready fuels and chemicals.
Products such as methanol can be sold directly or used as intermediate products in the creation of
other products such as ethanol, synthetic diesel, dimethyl ether, and synthetic gasoline.
The potential sale of residual heat and syngas from the new biofuels facility (as well as the sale of
concentrated carbon dioxide, fly ash, char, and carbon credits) are being actively pursued,
including an approved unique community project that will heat a Strathcona County neighbourhood
using residual heat and synthetic gas (syngas).
Economic Impacts of Waste-to-Biofuels:
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Energy efficiencies: At capacity, the new biofuels plant will gasify 100,000 tonnes of solid
waste to produce 36 million litres of ethanol a year. This amount contains the energy equivalent
of around 23 million litres of gasoline – enough to power about 18,000 average cars (8.5
litres/100 km) for 15,000 km/year.
Employment impact: The current Edmonton Waste Management Centre is a production plant
employing about 300 people. The new biofuels facility will create 25 additional highly skilled
green jobs.
Environmental Impacts of Waste-to-Biofuels:
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Recycling Levels: In both the U.S. and European Union, studies have demonstrated a positive
correlation between energy recovery in the region and higher than national recycling rates. The
new biofuels facility will increase the City of Edmonton’s current recycling rate by one third.
Materials sorting and recovery: The current Municipal Waste Treatment Facilities process
over 250,000 tonnes of waste per year. The new biofuels facility will take up to 100,000 tonnes
of residuals from the recycling and composting processes and turn it into 36 million litres of
ethanol and green chemicals per year. When completed, the Municipal Waste Treatment
Facilities will divert over 90 per cent of the municipal solid waste from landfill.
Landfill diversion: The facility will result in a net reduction in landfill additions of approximately
71,000 tonnes – the equivalent of filling a football stadium to a depth of 25 metres or about 90
feet every year. Input feed material will be comprised of about 23,000 tonnes of plastics from
the municipal solid waste stream and another 10,000 tonnes of plastic that will be selected from
the industrial, commercial and institutional, as well as construction and demolitions streams.
Captured energy: The new biofuels facility will produce enough ethanol to power 18,000 cars
driving 15,000 kilometres a year.
Greenhouse gas reductions: The new biofuels facility will reduce the City’s carbon footprint by
6,000,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent over the 25 year life of the plant.
Air emissions: Project implementation required an environmental permit from the Province of
Alberta. Analyses of exit gases from the pilot plant during runs using the feedstock materials
from the City of Edmonton demonstrated that, in normal operation, all of the common metals,
including those popularly called “heavy” metals, were below the limits of detection. Similarly,
chlorine, fluorine, sulphur, dioxins and particulates were below detection limits. Small amounts
of oxides of nitrogen and carbon monoxide are dispersed by a stack and were shown to be well
within the Alberta Ambient Air Quality Objectives. The result is a very environmentally clean
process that operates well within legislated guidelines.
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The Canadian Plastics Industry Association is the national voice of Canada’s plastics industry,
representing the interests of processors, material suppliers, equipment manufacturers and
brand owners across the country.
For More Information:
Darlene Gray, Marketing Communications Specialist
Canadian Plastics Industry Association
905.678.7748 ext. 239
[email protected]
www.plastics.ca
Click here for Media Kit