This study presents an overview of distinctive features of America’s first new waste-to-energy plant, which is a source of renewable energy and reduces greenhouse gas emission. With combustion and air pollution equipment designed and supplied by The Babcock & Wilcox Co. (B&W), the new facility addresses the pollution and cost issues that stopped municipalities from building waste-to-energy plants. It eliminates the burial of problematic wastes that routinely emit tons of volatile organic compounds and problematic chemicals. Waste-to-energy plants produce lower net greenhouse gas emissions than any landfill option. Not only do they displace fossil fuels to produce electricity, but also they effectively eliminate methane landfill emissions by burning the biodegradable landfill waste that forms methane. Test results show that the facility’s emissions are, at their maximum, an order of magnitude lower than those limits. This makes it the best in class of any waste-to-energy plant in the world. Waste-to-energy plants give municipalities facing rising landfill costs an economically and environmentally sound alternative to consider.
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February 2017
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Clean Power from Burning Trash
America's First New Waste-to-Energy Plant in Two Decades is a Source of Renewable Energy and Reduces Greenhouse Gas Emissions.
John B. Kitto, JR. PE is an ASME Fellow and was the development manager for the Palm Beach Waste-to-Energy Project for Babcock & Wilcox in Barberton, Ohio.
Larry A. Hiner is project developer for industrial steam generation (including waste-to-energy) with Babcock & Wilcox in Barberton, Ohio.
Mechanical Engineering. Feb 2017, 139(02): 32-37 (6 pages)
Published Online: February 1, 2017
Citation
Kitto, J. B., Jr, and Hiner, L. A. (February 1, 2017). "Clean Power from Burning Trash." ASME. Mechanical Engineering. February 2017; 139(02): 32–37. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.2017-Feb-1
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