BCC Minutes 06/11/2001 W (Solid Waste)June 11, 2001
TRANSCRIPT OF THE MEETING OF THE
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Naples, Florida, June 11, 2001
LET IT BE REMEMBERED, that the Board of County
Commissioners, in and for the County of Collier, and also acting
as the Board of Zoning Appeals and as the governing board(s) of
such special districts as have been created according to law and
having conducted business herein, met on this date at 6 p.m. in
WORKSHOP SESSION in Building "F" of the Government Complex,
East Naples, Florida, with the following members present:
CHAIRMAN:
VICE-CHAIRMAN:
ALSO PRESENT:
James D. Carter, Ph.D
Pamela S. Mac'Kie
Jim Coletta
Donna Fiala
Tom Henning
Tom Olliff, County Manager
David Weigel, County
Attorney
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NOTICE OF BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS WORKSHOP/EXPERT
PANEL DISCUSSION
Notice is hereby given that the Board of County Commissioners of Collier
County will conduct an Expert Panel Discussion in the form of a Workshop on
Long Term Solid Waste Options on Monday, June 11th, 2001, commencing at
6:00P.M., in the Commission Boardroom, Third Floor, W. Harmon Turner
Building, 3301 Tamiami Trail East, Naples, Florida.
The public is invited to attend this Workshop/Expert Panel Discussion.
For additional information, please contact the Collier County Solid Waste
Department at (941)-732-2508.
If you are a person with a disability who needs any accommodation in
order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the
provision of certain assistance. Please contact the Collier County Facilities
Management Department located at 3301 East Tamiami Trail, Naples, Florida,
34112, (941)-774-8380; assisted listening devices for the hearing impaired are
available in the County Commissioner's Office. .'
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
COLLIER COUNTY, FLORIDA
JAMES D. CARTER, Ph.D., CHAIRMAN
DWIGHT E. BROCK, CLERK
By:/sfTeri Michaels
Deputy Clerk
(SEAL)
June tt,200t
MR. MUDD: Ladies and gentlemen -- ladies and gentlemen, if
I could please get your attention, we could start this workshop.
Tonight is a -- is a long-promised workshop for solid waste
disposal for Collier County. We've -- we've brought a
distinguished panel of speakers here this evening to talk about
some of the aspects, and what I'd like to do is to -- is to read the
bio's of the speakers as they get prepared to speak so that you
know who they are and -- and what they've done in their past that
puts them into the distinguished range.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Mr. Mudd, before you do that, as is
procedure with all our meetings, we all stand and pledge
allegiance to the flag, and then we'll let you go right to work.
(The Pledge of Allegiance was recited in unison.}
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, Mr. Mudd. Please
continue.
MR. MUDD: Thank you, sir. What we'll try to do in the first
hour is to get the presenters, our panel, to talk about their
specific topics, and the topics this evening will be -- Dr. Paul
Connett will talk about zero waste and his thoughts on waste
energy. Dr. Monica Ozores-Hampton will talk about composting.
Dr. Kay H. Jones will talk about environmental health and the
risk of all the options. Mr. Jack A. Ristau will talk about waste-
to-energy, and Dr. Charles A. Stokes will talk about
pyrolisis/fluidized bed incineration, but he basically said we'll just
talk about gasification. And those will be the topics this evening.
The first hour we will have our speakers talk about those specific
issues. The second hour we'll take the questions and answers
from the commissioners and from -- and from the -- the audience.
There are question-and-answer sheets out there if you could fill
them out. And the third hour I will -- I will turn it back over as the
monitor to the Chairman of the Board of County Commissioners,
Dr. Carter, for public comment.
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And the public comment sheets are on the front table by
Russell Tuff in the blue shirt. And if you would like to speak
during the public comment period, fill out those sheets, and I will
put you in that process. The five-minute rule will be in effect for
public comment, and we need to be prompt because there are
several -- there are several speakers. So I'd ask you when you
get up there to make your point and -- and get it over with and
then give the next person time in order to get their thoughts
together and to make their comments too.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Would anyone mind if I sit out
here? I don't like it with my back to all these people out there.
Maybe there is one out there? I wondered if anybody else --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think we should all move out
there.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Well, I was hoping you would
jump in there and agree with me, maybe we wouldn't want to sit
with our backs to these people that are here, but that's my
choice.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Okay.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I'll take your chair if you don't
mind.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Tell you what, Commissioners, move
off to the side while the speakers speak so we don't block your
visual opportunity to see the speakers. And, Mr. Mudd, as far as
procedure, are we allowing each speaker X number of minutes to
speak so that I don't later hear that I gave one opportunity longer
than another?
MR. MUDD: Sir, I asked the speakers to keep their
comments in the 10-, 15-minute range. In 15 minutes I will tell
them their time is up and move to the next speaker.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you very much speakers for
your cooperation. Let's go forward.
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MR. MUDD.' Our first speaker will be Dr. Paul Connett. He
will talk about zero waste and -- and his thoughts on waste
energy. Dr. Connett resides in Canton, New York, and lists his
specialty areas as: Interaction of metals with biological systems,
chromium and lead in particular, build-up of dioxins in food
chains, health risk assessment, the problems, dangers and
alternatives to incineration, resource management for a
sustainable society, and the toxicity of fluoride.
He received his Doctorate in Chemistry from
Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, and a Bachelor
of Arts with Honors in Natural Sciences from Cambridge
University in England. His 29 years of teaching experience
includes 18 years in the chemistry department of St. Lawrence
University in Canton, New York, where he is currently professor
of chemistry. Dr. Connett has been co-author, with his wife,
Ellen, of Waste Not, a newsletter published 48 times a year since
1988. He has 41 videotapes on various aspects of waste
management that are distributed worldwide. Since 1985 he has
given over 1,600 public lectures that have been presented in 49
U.S. States and 47 countries around the world, published
numerous papers, and received citizenry and appreciation
awards. Without further ado, Dr. Connett.
DR. CONNETT: Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and
Commissioners. I would like to add that I do this for free. I don't
get paid for doing this. I do get my expenses covered.
Some of the things I've learnt in waste management: First of all,
we have an amazing ability to ask the wrong questions, and the
wrong question that's consistently asked in the waste business
is where shall we put our trash? Shall we put it in a hole in the
ground? Should we put in an incinerator is usually the answers.
The right question, in my view, is how do we stop making trash?
Just going to get this in focus a little bit better. In focus
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anybody? It's okay. Okay. Fine.
Waste is made by mixing. It's made by those ten things on
the end of our hands. This is what makes it, and the biggest
solution or the first critical step in solving this problem is also
with these ten things. It is with the separation.
We need separation before collection. We call that source
separation, and we need -- and there's a lot of that going on. And
we need another vital things which is separation before the
landfill, after collection, the separation of the residue. For the
foreseeable future, we're not going to get rid of landfills.
Look at the three options. If you have - what we have now is
dumping everything into a hole in the ground, and people don't
like living near that landfill. With an incinerator you still don't get
rid of the landfill because you have the bottom ash and the fly
ash and the bulky material and bypass material when it's not
working properly.
In the scheme that I am putting forward, we have, first of all,
the source separation followed by reuse and repair centers,
recycling of materials, composting of clean source separated
organics making the toxics visible. Then you're going to have a
residue. And I'm suggesting that that residue instead of going to
an incinerator goes to a screening facility where more recycles
are pulled out, more toxics are pulled out, and the dirty organic
fraction is then stabilized before it is used either as landfill cover
or as some Iow-grade purpose, but basically that would leave you
with a much smaller nontoxic, nonbiodegradable landfill.
I think we all agree that we need to reduce the quantity, the
toxicity, and the organic content of waste going to a landfill. But
this is where the disagreement comes in because basically we
have people here that would want to solve this problem by
destroying the materials, zapping them in an incinerator or
pyrolysis unit or something to essentially destroy them. The
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other approach is to recover them. I would argue that recovering
them is a far more important thing to be doing in the 21st century
than destroying them.
Incineration is a bad idea in my view. It puts highly toxic
and persistent substances into the air and then into our food at
enormous expense. Some of these substances are transferred to
the ash. They can be captured, but then you've got them in the
ash, and you've got one ton of ash for every three tons of trash
that you burn. The process is poorly monitored. I can go into
why I think that. The -- it wastes resources. It wastes energy
despite the fact the things are called waste-to-energy plants.
You can get three to four times more energy sold -- saved by
reusing and recycling the same materials. It's a wasted
opportunity to create local jobs and develop local industries, and
I also think it's a rather boring approach.
So even if you made incineration safe, you would never
make it sensible in my view. It simply does not make sense to
take so much money to destroy resources. We should be sharing
with the future. And I'm not alone in this. This is a comment
from the Director of the Eastern -- the European Unions Waste
Management Committee (as read): "An incinerator needs to be
fed for about 20 to 30 years and in order to be economic needs
an enormous input from quite a region." So for 20 to 30 years
you stifle innovation, you stifle alternatives just in order to feed
that monster which you built.
Now, in the past when I've had more time, I've gone into the
details of the air emissions from these incinerators. I'm not
going to do that tonight. Instead, I want to tell you what other
things are going up in smoke. First of all, millions of dollars of
taxpayers' money. We're talking $200 million here. Wasted jobs,
far more jobs in the alternatives, a waste of energy, a waste of
small business opportunities. Flexibility, it's inflexible. It's a lack
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of vision. It's a waste of resources. It's a lack of imagination, a
lack of creativity. It's -- it's abandoning community
responsibility, and it's not putting the pressure where we really
need to put it on industry for industrial responsibility and, of
course, it's not sustainable.
A lot of people agree with that and they say, "Look, you
know, show me. Show me where it's happening." Well, New
Jersey in 1995 was getting 45 percent of it's materials recycled.
That's the whole state. If you call it -- throw in construction and
demolition debris and auto parts and things like that, it lumps up
to 60 percent. That's not bad for a whole state.
The Institute of Local Self-reliance has been tracking
communities in the United States how much they can do, and as
of 1996, 66 communities in California had reached the statewide
goal of 50 percent diversion. If we move over to Canada, the City
of Guelph where the wet-dry cycle, very simple, one bag for the
wet waste, one bag for the dry waste, one bag for the clean
organics, one bag for the rest, 98 participation rate, so simple,
and they're getting an overall diversion rate of 50 percent -- 58
percent.
Now, if you throw in a third container, there's a very useful
economic incentive that can be used. You can have people pay
for the third container once you've established that this is
available, this is available, a lot of options for getting rid of these
materials. Then you say, well, the third container is going to be
expensive to deal with, and then they charge you for it. Now,
with that approach in the Quincy Region in Ontario, they have
managed to get -- and this is all documented, these reductions --
63 percent, 75 percent, and 69 percent, but these are small
communities.
What about a big city? Halifax, Nova Scotia, was all set to
build an incinerator. The citizens organized it, defeated it, and in
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the process consultants provided alternative scenarios, and I
have this whole report, by the way, and I'll make it available to
the commission to copy. But basically a three-way, just a
separation recyclables, compostables and the rest with a
screening facility, I talked about, with only an estimated 16
percent going to landfill. But I'm happy to tell you within six
years they've been doing this, and they are now up to 65 percent
diversion, and the whole of Nova Scotia is getting 50 percent
diversion. And in the process they created 3,100 jobs. If they
built the incinerator, they would have been lucky to get a
hundred jobs.
Now, Canberra, Australia, the capital of Australia has gone
one step further. They've got -- they've announced a no waste,
zero waste policy by the year 2010, no waste to landfill. Their
landfill looks more like an airport where the government owns
the infrastructure and gives out franchises for different
companies to handle different materials. We heard from three
companies this afternoon that are more than able to handle some
very complicated materials in that scenario and make a business
out of it. Now, within a few years Canberra had reduced its
waste stream by over 50 percent, but please notice what a huge
chunk of that reduction is from garden waste and demolition
waste. That's good news because in your community that's a
big, big percentage of your waste stream, horticultural waste and
construction and demolition debris.
Now, if you want more information about zero waste from
around the world, there is the web page. I'm happy to tell you 38
percent of the municipalities in New Zealand have announced a
zero waste strategy by 2015. Now on that site you can also see
some very, very exciting ideas because it isn't just the
community; industry, too, is announcing zero waste goals. Some
of our very, very prominent companies like Hewlett Packard and
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Fetzer Breweries and a few other interface carpet manufacturers
have announced zero waste policies. I've captured a lot of this
on videotape, and I will continue to do it and continue to make it
available.
But in summary, let me say this, zero waste is recognizing
the benefits of recycling but the limitations of recycling.
Communities cannot do it all by themselves. They just cannot do
it. We need a combination of community responsibility and
industrial responsibility, and I would say we need a triangle
because for this to happen we need good leadership. We need
good political leadership to put these two together.
So the way it works in my scenario would be, yes, the community
could come in and reduce and reuse and repair and recycle and
compost and get the toxics out and tell -- send the toxics back to
industry and say "We don't want those toxics" and give a reason,
you -- you take care of them. That's called clean production. And
then when we look at that residue in Phase One, that residue
that goes into the landfill, we have to encourage people to say,
"Look, if we can't reuse it, if we can't recycle it, if we can't
compost it, you guys shouldn't be making it." So that's what I
mean about letting industrial responsibility -- instead of running
around performing somersaults to get a magic machine to burn
up totally badly designed materials, we should say, "You do a
better job; otherwise we'll tax you out of existence." We need
that for a sustainable materials policy.
And so there are many other things I could say about this,
but I suspect I'm running out of--
MR. MUDD: You have three minutes.
DR. CONNETT: Three minutes, okay. Well, that's amazing.
Key steps, first of all, adopt a zero waste strategy. Announce a
goal. You don't have to get it immediately. It's not actually
saying we're going to get zero. We're going to get darn close,
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number one. It's setting a direction. This is the direction that we
want to move in. For hundreds of years we've accepted waste as
a given, but, actually, it's a human invention. Nature doesn't
make any waste at all. We have got to be more like nature and
not tolerate waste. That's the direction that we want to go. It's
going to, as I say, require community responsibility, industrial
responsibility, and good political leadership.
Let's have the citizens working together with the
government. We're not stupid. A lot of us have done a lot of
homework on this. Let's work together. If you try to build the
incinerator, unfortunately, you're going to unleash all that citizen
energy to try to stop you for one year, two years, three years, and
so that's a waste of time. It's a waste of valuable time and
energy.
Let's work together for this zero waste vision.
It's a vision that we're talking about, and I'm not saying it's going
to be easy. There are going to be problems. There are problems
encouraging people to do it, to do their little bit of effort, but it
seems to me the -- for the decision makers it makes most sense.
If you're going to face obstacles, at least choose that set of
obstacles which take you in the right direction. Unfortunately, if
you choose the problems of landfilling or incineration, when
you've overcome those problems of leaching and air emissions
and what you do with the ash, you're left where you started. You
have not made any progress towards what we have to do which
is to learn from those sustainable on a finite planet. Thank you
very much.
MR. MUDD: Thank you, Dr. Connett. Our next speaker will
be Dr. Monica Ozores-Hampton.
Dr. Ozores-Hampton has an extended and notable career in the
solid waste industry, most distinguished in the areas of compost.
She received her Doctorate from the University of Florida,
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College of Agriculture with her dissertation "Utilization of
Municipal Solid Waste Compost as Biological Weed Control in
Vegetable Crop Systems," and completed her Master's of Science
Degree at Florida International University with the -- with the
thesis "Influence of Municipal Solid Waste Compost on Growth,
Yield, Nutrients and Heavy Metal Content of Tomatoes and
Squash."
Dr. Ozores-Hampton's career includes a decade of teaching
experience offering horticulture and compost education at
Edison Community College in Fort Myers, University of Florida in
Fort Lauderdale, Florida -- Florida Internation University in Miami,
and agricultural courses in Santiago, Chile, and has been
published in the subjects of biological weed control in vegetable
crops with compost, manufacturing soil fertility and compost use
in Florida.
She received Recycling Florida Today, FORA Division's
Award for Best Research Institution in 1999 and is a regularly
invited speaker at Recycle Florida Today conferences, Florida
Organic Farming, Master Gardener and Extension Service
Workshops. She is currently a Post-Doctoral Research
Associate at the University of Florida Research and Education
Center in Immokalee where she is developing and evaluating
various compost management techniques. Dr. Ozores-Hampton.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: Thank you very much for the
invitation. My presentation today is going to be directly to
composting what we are doing in the county right now and what
we can be doing in the future.
You already went through my biography a little bit, and I
have extensive publication in composting and also consulting.
First of all, I want to define what is composting, and it's a
biological decomposition process where it's done by
microorganisms. Then convert the raw organic material into
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humus-like material, and it's done with bacteria, fungii and
microorganisms. The key is that is done by biological activity by
microorganisms. A lot of the failure in composting is not
addressing that the best point is a biological driven process.
Why composting? We produce about ten pounds per person per
day. In the State of Florida 24 million tons of waste. We are
twice of the -- of the national average because we have a large
tourist industry. If we recycle we can take about 47 percent of
the waste about 11 million tons which is organic, 50 percent,
about 60 percent depending on the county. If we compost it it is
11 million tons, we can get about 6 to 8 million tons of compost
that can be reutilized in our soils.
Now, we have sandy soils where we grow our Florida fruits
and vegetables which are Iow in fertility, but also we live in these
soils. We have houses. We have golf courses. We have parks,
but we have problems with many aspects of soil fertility and
pollution -- concern about pollution. Now, compost is three-
dimensional. It affects the physical, chemical, and biological
activities once it's added to the soil. I will talk a little bit about
that at the end of my presentation.
Now, what can be composted in the county? Well, like in
many other counties and many other places in the country, you
have materials that are high in organic and material that are high
in carbon. For example, biosolids, which is a very fancy word for
sewage, if you want to call it sewage, about 23,000 tons we
produce here in the county. We've got food waste, commercial
and residential. You have animal manure, and you have other
materials, like seaweed, grass clipping, et cetera. Excellent
material for composting. Material high in carbon, all the yard
waste, biomatter, trash waste, whatever you want to call it,
73,000 tons.
You also have municipal solid waste which is household
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garbage which would include the inorganic trash and organic
trash. I'm talking about all the organic trash.
The last part you don't see there is wood waste which is
material high in carbon. A lot of land clearing that is happening
in the county as well. A lot of that, high in carbon material. That
can be perfect for composting. Mixing these two high nitrogen
and high carbon can give you the best composting process, and
you have both of them in the county. This is some of the
example, biosolid yard trimming waste, and you have some grass
clipping for a lot of the golf courses industry here in the county.
How can we compost? I give you three scenarios that are very
practical for the county to take over. One is a community-based
backyard composting. Very popular. I do it in four different
counties. I've done it in this county. It's been very, very
successful.
Commercial composting, you can take over and take all the
organics out of the landfill and compost it yourself like many
other counties. And the last one is composting by a local
grower. You have a large commercial fruit and vegetable
production all around you. They need the organics in the soil.
They are very Iow in organic matters.
You have three fantastic alternatives. Community-based
backyard composting, you can teach people to design and build a
composter. With $20 they can build a composter in the back of
their yard. I'm not saying everybody's going to do that, but you
would be surprised how many people are willing to do that.
Another alternative, commercial composter. I've done many,
many lectures in Charlotte County, Dade County, Hendry County,
and many other counties. When I give a talk they pay $35 and
also they give -- they get a composter and they take it home, and
they are very happy. Some of my lectures on a Saturday 150
people, and they are willing to do it. So why not to do it here?
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The second option, commercial composting. You can do it.
There are many, many different groupings and technologies that
you can use like a windrow, like in a static pile methods in
composting, many, many different technologies and, maybe there
will be another talk later on.
Like, for example, counties -- go to next slide. One second.
Palm Beach Solid Waste Authority many, many years ago made
the commitment to basically compost all the yard waste and
biosolids, and they have a state-of-the art composting facility for
what is called Innovative Composting Facility. You start with a
totally enclosed into a building so they control any type of odors
very, very well. They go into what is called agitated bed on the
right where the turning is automatic, adding water is automatic,
the mixing is done, in there to the left -- to your right picture in
the compost is going to stay there for about 21 days and in this
agitated bed everything is automatically done and by the end it's
going to curing windrow type of situation where the product can
be sold.
Later, they put a screener there where they produce a
compost that is a great -- is great for the golf course industry
which they sell, I think, $10 a yard. So you tell me it's not
possible to be done as they're doing it. They are doing it.
Sumter County, they take all the municipal waste, household
garbage, and they take it to a composting facility where basically
prisoners take all the recycling, where my speaker before me
was source separation done by prisoners. That's why I don't
have very good pictures. Because they don't allow you to do
that, but through the converyor the material is hand picked, all
the material that is not organic at the end go into a drum that is
by bioconversion which is stay there for three days, and at the
end they do a windrow composting. That's another technology.
Finally, Walt Disney, they compost all the material coming from
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the county. Remember, Walt Disney is a county by itself. They
compost biosolids, food waste, animal waste, wood waste, yard
waste, in what is called a static pile, and they use that material
throughout the whole park. So it would be reduced the amount
of organic to be bought for the nurseries.
Now, third option in what we are doing -- you are doing in the
county right now is composting with the local growers, tomatoes
-- Pacific Tomato Growers. Basically, with the help of Dr. George
Hillman in the Collier County Solid Waste Authority, the yard
waste is being taken to your local growers in Pacific Tomato
Growers at the site of Pacific Tomato Growers, and with R&D
Soil Builders, which is the one doing the composting, is taking
place on the their site. The yard waste is taken to them, and
they are putting the money into the composting oven venture
and, of course, me. I'm giving the training to make sure that
these composting facility of the yard waste, about 70,000 tons of
yard waste is being successfully composted.
This is some of the pictures I will be showing of that Pacific
Tomato Grower Soil Builders. Basically the yard waste arrives
into the facility. They do a little bit of grinding to make it to a
small particle size. They also use biosolid for the City of Naples
to basically get the best carbon-nitrogen ratio for the composting
process. Later on they take it into what is called a windrow
composting. They have windrow turners and they produce a
fantastic finished product that later on can be screened and
growers, citrus and vegetable growers, or you from the county
can be used for the county for the beautification of the cities.
This is some of the spreaders that we use for spreading the
compost and citrus production as well as vegetables.
What are the benefits of compost and the land?
Basically, buffer soil temperatures, increase water holding
capacities, a very important point lately because the rain is so
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small, so with less than one percent of organic matters, you're
not going to get a lot of holding capacity. If you add this
material, you can increase that. Also increase carrying capacity,
the ability of the soil to retain for nutrients, therefore, lowering
the concern of pollution from fertilizer. You increase basically
the efficiency of the fertilizer and lowering the concern for
pollution. Increase the organic matter and the structure of the
soil, increase -- increase the microbic activity of the soil and also
prevent erosion, which is really -- DOT construction all over the
county you've got a lot of erosion.
Now, what can we do in the future for Collier County? We
can compost more besides the 70,000 tons we are already
composting. We can take all the biosolids. We need it for the
best composting process. These products normally have
between three and five percent nitrogen. It is excellent for
producing the type of carbon-nitrogen ratio to start the
composting process, so we can take that. We can take all the
food waste from commercial and residential, food waste about
two percent nitrogen, excellent amendment for a high carbon
material like yard waste or land clearing.
We can do education. I have a composting school that
address backyard composting as well as commercial composting
where I make sure that people that start a composting venture
are no failure, but they are a success.
Now, lastly, I just want to talk a little bit about marketing
compost products. There is too many issues about that. One,
have a competitive price and effective market strategy, and you
will be very successful. That's my -- you know, my take. Many
other people can add a lot more. Thank you.
In conclusion, the need for composting is real.
You have the materials available such as yard trimming, food
waste, biosolids, animal manure. You have a lot of seaweed. It
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can be composted and other organic material that it would be
perfect for the composting process, about 50 to 60 percent of the
waste stream, quite a bit, almost half of that. Now these
programs, these composting programs have the potential to
increase compost production in use as a component of a
sustainable horticulture production system. I'm not only talking
about only to grow vegetables or fruits but in your backyard, from
your golf course, in your park, any sustainable horticulture
system that we use surrounding us.
And, lastly, I just want to take -- I love this picture because
it's what any county in South Florida is becoming; right? Right?
And I just wanted to leave you with the idea of get away from
waste disposal and get into resource utilization because what
you have is a resource that we can utilize. Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Our next speaker will be Dr. Kay H. Jones, and
he'll talk to us about environmental health and -- and the risk of
all the alternatives. Dr. Kay Jones has had a long and
distinguished career spanning 42 years of professional service
dealing with environmental protection in both public and private
sectors. He received his Ph.D. In Environmental Engineering with
minors in Chemical Engineering and Environmental Toxicology
from the University of California at Berkeley. He also was
awarded a Master of Science Degree in Environmental
Engineering from Berkeley, as well as a Bachelor of Science
degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Washington.
During his distinguished professional career in environmental
protection, Dr. Jones was involved in over -- over 40 solid waste
management projects addressing permitting issues, technology
assessment, risk analysis, and has served as a court-recognized
qualified expert witness on more than 20 permitting related
proceedings.
Some brief examples of Dr. Jones' varied expertise and
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June 11,2001
experience as an international and nationally recognized
authority on the environmental risks of solid waste management
are: He authored the President's initiative on acid rain for the
Carter Administration while serving as a member of the
President's Council on Environmental Quality; He managed
research in the areas of stationary and mobile source emissions
control, as well as meteorology and atmospheric chemistry
during his tenure at the -- at the predecessor organization of the
US EPA. He directed the air quality management pilot study for
the NATO Committee on the Challenges to Modern Society and
served as the Director of the US/Soviet bilateral program on
research on the control of mobile source emissions under the
Nixon Administration. He's directed all environmental protection
programs at the U.S. Air Force missile launch complex,
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. And he's taught
environmental engineering and related air quality management
courses for 12 years at George Washington, Howard, and Drexel
Universities.
Dr. Kay Jones is currently a professor of Zephyr
Consulting in Seattle, Washington, and has held the following
positions: Vice President of Roy F. Weston, Inc; professor of
Environmental Engineering at Drexel University; Senior Advisor
for Air Quality at the Council on Environmental Quality for the
Ford and Carter Administrations; Consultant to the World Health
Organization; Senior Technical Advisor and Research Manager,
Office of Air Programs, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency;
and Bioenvironmental Engineer U.S. Air Force. Without further
ado, Dr. Jones.
DR. JONES: Thank you. I believe that we passed out copies
of my overheads to the Commissioners, and I did that so you can
take notes for the quiz we'll have at the end -- end of the evening.
What I'm going to talk about today is risk assessment and risk
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June 11, 2001
analysis of the various solid waste options. Heretofore, I think
almost all of you believe that probably incinerators were the only
risky option that we had before us, and I want to present some
data, and this information comes from two peer-reviewed papers
that I published that can be made available if you so desire.
All the options in solid waste management have common health
risks. In particular -- and I'm going to startle you -- in particular
as it relates to dioxins. The different options have different levels
of risk, obviously, and as I said before past risk assessments
have focused primarily on waste-to-energy facilities.
Dioxins are associated with all of these options. We must
differentiate between hypothetical and statistical risks. And
when I say that -- when we talk about health risks of dioxins and
metals and so forth, we're talking about hypothetical risks which
were based on models that we use to calculate risks which may
be common across all of these strategies. Statistical risks are --
on the other hand, are based on actual observed death rates, and
one of the -- one of the areas where you've not really addressed
risks is transportation risks. If you were going to load up all your
waste into a train and haul it halfway across two states and so
forth, we do have train wrecks. We read about train wrecks all
the time. So we should be accounting death and injury due to
increased transportation for some of the strategies.
The same risk assessment models apply and the same
assumptions apply to the risk analysis of all the alternatives.
And, obviously, site specific data we influence comparative to
risk assessment estimates especially as they relate to
composting.
When I talk about composting today, I'm going to be talking
about the risk associated just for the composting of municipal
waste rather than other agricultural waste which could influence
or dilute -- possibly dilute the system. Interestingly enough,
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June 11,2001
you're a source of dioxins every time you put your garbage can
out on the corner. I conducted a mass balance around a modern
waste energy facility in Spokane, Washington, and if you look at
the upper right there, you can see that there's about -- I'm not
going to bore you with the -- with the units but there's about 15.3
micrograms of dioxins in every ton of waste that comes into a
waste facility. And what comes out the stack is only about three
percent of that, only three percent. So we have a removal of
these facilities actually remove dioxins from the environment,
because what happened even though it may produce some
dioxins, it -- internally in the system it ends up in the ash and
goes in an ash monofil where it can go -- it can go nowhere. It
can't evaporate in the atmosphere. It can't go in the ground
water. It's like putting it in concrete. So we are interning the
dioxins when we have a waste-to-energy facility in operation.
If we were to compost that material -- can we focus this a little
bit? Is that a little better?
This is some data taken in Germany of the amount of dioxins
that exist in various types of waste, and you can see mixed
waste, plant waste, bark, special matter, and some other
unspecified data, but when you take the data from Spokane and
you assume you get about 70 percent residual of compost out of
that waste stream and you also remove the metals and other
things out of the stream, we end up with about 29 micrograms
per ton of dioxins in the compost.
So now what do we do with the compost? Well, here are a
variety of options showing what -- what would happen if we look
at the alternatives. I ran the calculations here for an 800-ton-per-
day facility just arbitrarily. We would have about 11.1 milligrams
of dioxins coming into the -- into the system a day. If we put in a
resource -- resource recovery facility we will have about 3/10 of a
miligram to the atmosphere. If we put it in a landfill -- and what
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June 11,2001
happens today in landfills you have to put in gas recovery
systems. You need to collect that gas and burn the gas. You'll
either burn it in a flare, an lC engine, or in a turbine, and they all
produce dioxins, and it's all been measured. And so they will put
out about 3/10 of a milligram per day out of the stack from that
particular incineration facility. In this case, I did this for flare.
Now, if we compost the material, we have 11.1 milligrams
coming in, you've got 11.1 milligrams coming out of the other end
of the compost system. Where does that go? Well, if you sell it
to your neighbors and so forth and you put it in your backyard put
it around your rose bushes and so forth, you expose children and
animals and so forth to that dioxin in that soil material. I'll show
you some comparisons. Or you take the compost and put it back
in the landfill and then you produce gaseous materials which
then moves the dioxins to the atmosphere.
Now, if we -- if we compare a stack, this is what we would
see. If we model the dioxins coming out of the stack. We plant a
point where the plumb hits the most how often, the most
frequent during the year, we would end up with about 800th of a
nanogram per square meter per year of deposition through wet
and dry deposition of dioxins coming out of the atmosphere.
If we take that same amount of material and depending on how
much material we put around our rose bushes and backyard
garden, you could have anywhere from 59 to over 2000
nanograms per square meter per year to place around plants
using agricultural operations.
The inhalation risk, as we're breathing the air, well, that
doesn't apply to compost, but if we compare the same model we
used to do the risk assessment of a child eating dirt in the yard
and compare that of eating the dirt where materials are
deposited from the stack versus here, you can see the risk is
tremendously different. The person we're most concerned about
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June 11,2001
for dioxin exposure from any of these sources is the -- is the
subsistence farmer, especially from the atmospheric deposition
on the foder and the feed and corn and so forth. The cow eats it
and then you eat the cow, drink the cow's milk, or eat the beef,
and so this is sort of a typical number we would see in terms of
the subsistence farmer. He would be the maximum exposed guy.
Over here we don't know because we don't know what the
application is, but if that farmer puts it as agricultural land he's
actually putting dioxins on the land, so this has a lot of variability
about it, but for sure if he were using that on his land and his
cattle -- because cattle eat dirt, he would be -- the cows would be
eating a lot of dioxins here and would surely probably have a
greater risk on an equivalent basis to this case over here
(indicating).
I won't -- I won't talk about metals, but I know at one point in
time I looked at this. It was an operation called Agrisoil,
operations here doing municipal waste, and you have a lot of
metals in a lot of places that had real problems especially with
lead, excess lead, again, not being able to use the material for
composting. So you can look -- you can -- these tables are
available. You can compare what the amount of cadmium, lead
and mercury would be using a stacked deposition versus
compost.
Let me talk about landfills. I did an analysis of -- of 750 tons
a day of waste and determine how much gas was generated over
a 70-year period, and then I compared the risks of these options
of a waste-to-energy facility, a landfill flare, a landfill internal
combustion engine, and you can see that the risks are -- are
higher in all cases for the landfill case as opposed to the waste-
to-energy. Again, site specific data would determine this
because you don't know whether the field you live in that close
to the landfill or that close to the waste management facility.
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June 11,2001
But, still, using the same models and the same dioxins -- dioxin
measured -- measured levels you can see these compared risks.
I'm not, again, suggesting that any of these are unacceptable,
but the point is that they're comparable. There isn't one that's
more -- necessarily more risk than the other, though in this case
the lC engine case has a higher individual risk.
There's other considerations when you talk about emissions.
You don't have to look at the numbers. Everybody's talking about
-- talking about global warming. That's the big -- big thing today.
Turns out that landfills put out a great deal more global warming
gases than a waste-to-energy facility does. Recycling risks. We
don't think much about that. Industrial accidents have been two
people killed in the last two years at recycling facilities. One in
Seattle, one in Oregon -- one in California.
Deinking sludge, newspaper recycling. You got a -- you got
to get that ink out of that newspaper somehow before you can
reuse it. So what do you do with the sludge; put it in a landfill or
you burn it. When you burn it, you emit dioxins. And it turns out
that the actual facility that I had analyzed in California that the
risk -- the people living adjacent to the -- to the recycling facility,
newspaper deinking facility, they had the same risk as somebody
living next to a facility that was burning all the waste, not just
recycling ten percent of the newsprint.
The delacquering operations, the Holy Grail, aluminum can
recycling. One of the biggest single source of dioxin emissions
in this country are from the delacquering of aluminum cans. You
don't hear much about it, but they are tremendous in their history
to not have a lot of air pollution control on those facilities.
Anything that involves heating, melting, grinding can all cause
emissions of metals, emissions of dioxins, and I think I already
mentioned to you the transportation difference being one that
really should be considered when you consider all the options.
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June 11,2001
Now, let me try to put -- put the dioxin issue in a little
perspective. If we had an 800-ton-per-day facility and had it
properly designed with the proper stack and so forth, the risk to
a subsistence farmer living maybe two kilometers from that
stack would be about .28 chances in a million. Anything less
than one chance in a million is considered insignificant by the
Federal EPA, and when they clean up superfund sites they clean
up to a hundred chances in a million and then look at cost of
them trying to reduce that risk from a hundred down towards one
in a million.
Diesel trucks, probably the biggest single source of dioxin
exposure in my personal and professional opinion are diesel
exhaust in this country, and you can actually -- and I have
actually published a paper on this in the journal Risk Assessment
where a hundred trucks -- there's more than a hundred trucks per
hour going down the highway out here, I can tell you that for
sure, and if you're a farmer living within a thousand -- hundred to
a thousand meters and raise your own cattle and so forth, you
have a risk of 6/10 to 18 -- 18 chances in a million of contracting
cancer, much much, higher than this here.
Now, every time you eat a Big Mac, every time you eat pizza,
every time you eat Kentucky Fried Chicken you're consuming
dioxins. Actual measurements published in the literature and
you're consuming dioxins. And so you can calculate over a
lifetime if you eat ten Big Macs in 70 years -- ten Big Macs in 70
years, you have about a 10th of this risk up here and it turns out
that individual risk, if you lived at maximum impact in the stack,
you're about 1/10 of what the farmer would get if he lived there
because you're not eating the beef and the dairy products. Your
children are getting the soil and you're breathing it and so forth.
So what I'm saying here is that for an adult living downwind
of a facility, his total risk, lifetime risk at that single point in
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June 11,2001
space is about the equal to about ten Big Macs over a 70-year
period. So I tried to present to you is -- I'm not trying to say
waste-to-energy. I'm not saying it's landfills. I'm not saying that
it's composting. But they all have the same types of risk, and
you must understand that. You're not trading one zero for one at
all, and I think it's important to understand that the dioxin issue
is not as large as people perceive -- perceive it to be because
dioxins are everywhere. Dioxins are everywhere. In fact, there is
some evidence to suggest that even during composting
operations the dioxins are actually formed during composting.
So there was a case where they found some ball clay areas
where they were feeding the chickens. The chickens had some
elevated dioxin levels. It turns out it came from the ball clay.
The ball clay came from a virgin source somewhere in Louisiana,
and it had dioxins in it probably due to just natural decay of
organic material. So I hope you will have some good questions
later on. Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Our next speaker will be Mr. Jack A. Ristau,
Vice President, Business Development of Wheelabrator
Technologies, Inc. Jack Ristau has over 27 years of experience
in water, wastewater, solid waste management, and energy
recovery projects in United States and overseas. Since joining
Wheelabrator in 1984 he has been responsible for and directed a
number of resource recovery business development activities in
the United States. Dr. Ristau served as the Project Manager and
Business Developer for the 2250-ton-per day South Broward
waste-to-energy plant in Florida.
Currently Mr. Ristau directs international waste-to-energy
project developments in Hong Kong, Singapore, Guam, and
Taiwan. In addition, his international experience includes
business development work in Mexico, Turkey, United Kingdom,
Puerto Rico, the Bahamas, Jamaica, and Barbados.
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June 11,2001
Presently, Mr. Ristau provided resource recovery and solid
waste management consulting services for the MITRE
Corporation. Prior to MITRE he served as a Project Manager with
Hayden Wegman Engineers, Inc., and Metcalf and Eddy, Inc.
In addition to Mr. Ristau's undergraduate degree in civil
engineering from the Pennsylvania State University -- State
University, he holds a Master's Degree from the Industrial
Management Department at Northeastern University in Boston,
Massachusetts. Mr. Ristau is also a licensed professional
engineer. Sir.
MR. RISTAU'. Thank you very much. I handed out to
commissioners a package. What I'm going to be doing is taking
some of those slides out of that package. I'm not going to try to
go through all 46, kind of condense it down to get through in 15
minutes that I have here.
What I'm going to do is not talk about our company but really
talk about the waste-to-energy industry in the United States as it
stands now. As the slide says a overview, and what we'll be
talking about here really is in three parts to make it easier to get
through technology, the energy-generation aspect, and some of
the environment benefits that the communities see with the use
of waste-to-energy facilities here in the United States.
You have the advantage here in Florida of being able to visit
some 14 waste-to-energy plants. You have one up here in Lee
County, two in Broward, one in Pinellas, and one in Tampa, and
almost always you can get in and take a tour of these facilities,
but in general this is what you see no matter what technology,
other than possibly what's called refuse derived fuel.
This is a description -- a schematic of what is called a mass
burn facility, that being all the trash that's left over after
recycling comes to the facility for further processing and turning
it into energy and finally to the landfill. What we have is the
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June 11, 2001
trucks coming in the enclosed receiving area, discharged into a
storage hopper which acts at this point in some sense a fuel
storage. By crane it's taken into a hopper and then fed into the
furnace where it is especially designed grates. The heat travels
up through a boiler, recovers the heat to form the steam to more
often than not to produce electricity. And then finally the
emissions come out of the facilities clean through various air
emission control devices. The ash comes off the -- out of the
grates of the boiler, and that more often than not ends up at a
landfill for ultimate disposal. Very simplistic but this is very
basic to the process that we have in the United States as well as
other countries across the world.
In the United States there is some 102 facilities operating,
70 of these facilities as shown in that diagram. There are 19
facilities that are called refuse derived fuel facilities where
there's a lot of reprocessing of the trash, grinding, sorting, some
mechanical removing of certain materials and then finally going
into a unit for combustion and recovery of energy. There are a
lot of smaller facilities, generally less than 250 tons per day of
capacity, processing trash here in the United States.
On a percentage basis the United States has been processing
waste-to-energy plants approximately 15 percent. This remains
very much level here for the last five to six years. In Europe,
depending on the country, but overall you'll see approximately 30
percent of the waste stream ends up in waste-to-energy plants,
another 30 to 40 percent for recycling, and the balance going to
landfill. Annually, 30 million tons of trash are processed in these
facilities with 102 facilities serving some 37 million, and there
are 31 states that have these. Florida has -- has 14 now out of
that 102 plants that I mentioned before.
This diagram just simply shows the annual daily capacity of
these combined plants. As it shows you in tons per day, we're
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June 11, 2001
processing in these facilities approximately a hundred thousand
tons per day across the United States is how these things are
being utilized in the United States, and it remains pretty much
constant and largely due to recycling efforts and reduction
efforts to try to help augment these facilities as part of a
disposal group of technologies.
And, of course, as mentioned before the air emission control
technologies through -- controlled through combustion control.
Start by controlling the emissions by having good control, fabric
filters for taking out particulates, scrubbers for -- sulfur dioxide,
nitric oxide, and goes on and on here, and finally ash treatment.
So these systems have been in operation for the past 25 years.
Our company was one of the first companies to build a
commercial waste-to-energy plant in 1975 in Saugus,
Massachusetts, right outside of Boston. That facility is still
operating today as a very viable commercial operation.
This is somewhat homegrown.
You can look at it this way. You're growing energy. That is
one of the benefits that communities see out of using waste-to-
energy as part of their solution in dealing with solid waste. Right
now those 102 facilities serving some 250 -- two and a half
million, some 2600 megawatts of power, which is quite
substantial, steam used to generate and, of course, about 3
percent of the total energy produced is being produced by 3/10 of
a percent -- excuse me -- is being produced by waste-to-energy
facilities.
There are several -- a number of states that have deemed by
definition that this is a renewable energy. These are
Pennsylvania -- of course, Florida is one of them as a renewable.
And, of course, that becomes an important definition as we go
through different tax legislation here, and right now landfills --
excuse me, waste-to-energy plants but also landfill gas projects
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June 11,2001
are now being considered for certain tax credits to help
stimulate these businesses to produce more electricity as we're
looking towards our problems here in the United States with
electric generation.
Environmental benefits, to wrap this up in the last section,
these are the major areas meeting clean air standards, reducing
greenhouse gases. We'll go through these one by one.
Certainly, the emissions from these facilities are stringently
controlled, not only by control process itself, but the air emission
equipment on the back, limits on opacity, standards for good
combustion practices and operator training all add to producing
an effluent that's clean and safe.
We also have the benefit of reducing greenhouse gases, as
Dr. Jones mentioned briefly, producing methane gases from --
from generation of organics and, of course, by burning electricity,
making electricity from refuse rather than fossil fuels, you're
offsetting fossil fuel emissions. Little statistics from EPA,
electricity produced from trash some 6 million metric tons from
carbon equivalent of greenhouse gases are reduced by displacing
fossil fuels, so there's an added global benefit. And trash
management produces some five million metric tons of
greenhouse -- greenhouse gases by eliminating methane
emissions from land disposal.
The general principle here is landfills know nothing about
weight. They only know something about volume so when you
run into a problem with land disposal it's not because the landfill
got too heavy -- it got too big. And this is the ma]or reason
waste-to-energy plants are -- are utilized. Because you can take
10 tons of trash and reduce it by volume down to one. So you
reduce that volume of that trash some 90 percent and, as
someone had noted before, 30 percent by weight. Ash disposal
ends up in a lined landfill just like trash does today. The trash
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June 11, 2001
can be used as -- excuse me, your ash can be used as daily
cover. Pinellas County up in Florida is doing that now, using it for
cover material, and a number of other places in Pennsylvania use
ash as daily cover. The fact is the ash after combustion can be
used for cover or other materials and can, of course, go into the
same landfill that your trash is going into at this time.
This point here is that recycling doesn't have to compete with
waste-to-energy. It's part of a process, part of a tool -- toolbox of
tools that you might have as we see on these waste-to-energy
plant -- these 102 plants, these communities are averaging at
least 33 percent of recycling materials, 5 percent above the
national average. I think that's a key point here is that if a guy
came to build your porch or an addition to your house and came
up with only one tool, would you hire that guy? I don't think so.
What you're looking to do as these communities grow is have
somebody who has multiple tools in the toolbox to build the
house. In this case, waste-to-energy, recycling, and all those
other technologies are viable components of a solid waste plan.
These plants also have the opportunity to recovering ferrous and
nonferrous materials of quite sizable numbers and, of course, as I
noted before, the ash can be used for cover material.
And we're down to the last slide. One issue that is very --
very important here in Florida like most other places, though, is
that the facilities can be built with dry cooling towers to
conserve water. These plants are built with zero water
discharge, so there's no processed water in the facility. None of
the processed water in the facility gets disposed of in streams.
It's all recycled and reused within the facility and, of course,
there's also storm water management at all these facilities.
And that in total is the -- is the industry as it stands here in the
United States. I included those in the -- in the packages for the
commissioners for their look, and I hope I've condensed it down
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June 11, 2001
enough rather than rambling on. Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Our final speaker will be Dr. Charles A. Stokes, a
resident of Naples. He has a Doctorate in Chemical Engineering
from M.I.T. He has 25 years as -- chief technical officer for two
petrochemical companies and for the chemical division of a
major integrated petroleum company. He has 25 years of
experience as a consultant to two ma]or international chemical,
petroleum, and energy industries with emphasis on developing
new technologies and new ventures. Special expertise in
methanol, basic petrochemicals, and finely divided materials
such as carbon black and silica. Other special areas are VOC
controls, synthetic fuels, gasification of coals and biomass,
alternative motor fuels, the management of solid waste by
conversion to energy or compost with recovery of recyclables,
and renewable energies. Dr. Stokes.
DR. STOKES: May I appear here at the counter? I have no
slides. May I speak from here? MR. MUDD: Yes, sir.
DR. STOKES: Thanks very much. I'm delighted to be here.
My PowerPoint presentation time was taken up this evening from
the flood in Houston where I arrived home last night at 7 p.m. I
didn't think it could ever rain that much.
I'm -- I'm honored to appear here with these gentlemen, and I
learned a great deal from each and every one of them tonight. I
thought I knew quite a bit about solid waste, but I've learned an
awful lot more tonight. You've done a good job, Jim, of
assembling people.
While I'm here to speak on the gasification of municipal solid
waste and the latest technology for waste by direct -- for use of
waste by direct combustion to make energy, there are some
general remarks I want to make. First, whatever the county will
do to decide on a long-term solution will take time. There's no
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June 11,2001
way the county can decide in a few weeks or a few months on a
final technology, let alone a final responsible vendor. So
everyone should let his or her blood pressure go back to normal
and calmly observe what will be a lengthy and difficult process.
I note from these other gentlemen that there are risks in all of
the processes, and I note that waste-to-energy the risks are
rather minimal. I see Senator Saunders smiling because he was
into this with us 15 years ago up to his ears.
Now, we're talking being a project that would cost upwards
of 150 to 200 million dollars whether spent up front or in
increments over some years, and that last statement's kind of
important. I mean, you don't get out of spending the money; you
just spread it out perhaps farther. You can spend it all at once
and get a total solution or spread the expenditures out over a
number of years. Even more importantly, the county must not
get in a mess like Lake County which has a good waste-to-energy
plan and a lousy deal. I was born and raised in Lake County and
still own property there. My father was the longest serving
commissioner, so I kept up with every nuance of their sad saga
on waste-to-energy. It is the way not to do it.
Second, whatever the county does must be done by a large
financially strong, highly capable vendor that has a track record
of accomplishing what they say they can do. The county by itself
cannot build, operate, and coordinate a solid waste solution by
putting together a lot of miscellaneous pieces that in theory can
in totality handle the whole problem. This is a recipe for
absolute disaster. Fifteen or so years ago we rejected waste-to-
energy officially on the basis of the cost. Behind the scenes the
real reasons were environmental objections on the one hand and
a hope that by waiting technologies would get better and
cheaper. Well, I'm happy to say that the former is true. We do
have better technologies, but they are not cheaper than 15 years
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June 11, 2001
ago. It is the opposite, because they are far lower in emissions
and higher in recycling.
The first of these large improvements in waste-to-energy is
based on evolutionary development, not revolutionary, of exactly
the same technology that was selected 15 years ago in this very
room. It's front-end separation of metals for sale, fuel sizing,
combustion in a limestone augmented fluidized bed boiler
operating at lower temperatures and with far more homogenous
combustion conditions than in mass burn plants like Lee County.
This leads to less nitrogen oxide and diminimus amounts of
dioxin as Dr. Thomas has pointed out.
Following the combustion is improved flu gas clean-up that
lowers dioxin and mercury well below the already state and
federally approved levels that Lee County smoothly out
functioning waste-to-energy plant. Lee County's plant, by the
way, is a model world-class mass burn plant, not that there aren't
a number of others around the country. There are a lot of goods
ones. Now, many of you have perhaps visited this; if not, you
should. Don't be armchair observers. We have too many of these
already. The ash from fluidized bed combuster can be screened
and either sold for a small amount or given away for use in road
stabilization, in concrete block manufacture and so forth. Thus,
the degree of recycling with waste-to-energy can be 90 to 95
percent.
Now, 52 percent of all of our electrical energy is made from
coal. The amount will grow even if temporarily the portion
decreases due to the use of gas. Florida has many coal-based
power plants. Most of you probably didn't know that. The
closest is only as far away as Lakeland where interestingly
enough they separate their municipal waste into recyclables and
stuff for the landfill and a fuel fraction which is coal fired with
coal. They've been doing that 15 or 20 years. There are large
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June 11,2001
coal-based power plants in Tampa, Crystal River, Orlando,
Jacksonville, Gainesville, Palatka, and several more in West
Florida. The most modern coal-fired power plant in the world,
guess where it is; it's in Brewster, Florida, just south of Lakeland.
Fuel prepared from MSW is cleaner than coal. It is quite
reasonable to combust a fuel cleaner than coal to make power,
thus displacing coal-fired capacity. Quite reasonable to do that.
It isn't necessarily what you want to do and, by the way, I am
entirely method neutral in coming here. I don't advocate any of
these methods over another. I represent none of the people. If
all the MSW in the U.S. Were burned to make power, it would
make about I percent as much power as the coal or, as Jack
pointed out, 3/10 percent of the total power. So we're not talking
about burning very much stuff.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Pyrolysis.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Excuse me. It'll be quiet while people
are speaking.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Agenda says pyrolysis.
DR. STOKES: Now, the ultra-clean coal-fired plan at
Brewster first gasifies the coal and then compbusts the gas. As
can also be done with MSW, and that's the other part of my
presentation. And I will iljustrate it with Australian experience
which is now operating where we first gasify the waste and then
combust the gas. This Australian -- by the way, the fluid bed
combustion technology that I referred to a representative of that
company. Frank Summerville is in the audience; that is the
Foster Wheeler Company in case that's important for anyone to
ask a question.
The Australian technology originated in the United States as
a means of converting ground, wood, sawdust, and bark into
clean fuel gas for power generation in engines. These engines
are much more efficient than the steam cycles used in waste-to-
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June 11, 2001
energy plants. I actually was a consultant to the developer of
the process in it's early stages when they were solely concerned
with gasifying biomass. They were then bought out by a
progressive and highly successful Australian company who
operates many landfill gas power plants around the world. They
decided to concentrate on garbage-to-energy because they
couldn't find enough Iow-cost wood waste to bother with, and
that's why I quit consulting for the company six or eight years
ago. We couldn't find anything to put in our gasifier. Now, these
people in Australia then bought a novel front-end process to
prepare gasification feed stock so it could be gasified. This front
digests the MSW after separating out large materials in a
pressure vessel and ends up by recovering very clean metals
which are highly saleable and glass is dropped out for landfill.
Prepared feed is then partially dried and gasified and fed to a
series of efficient engines to generate power. They are offering
this process in the U.S. Under the Bright Star Environmental
name and you may see 150 ton per day operating on MSW in
Gehlong, Australia. It ran for a while on the green waste that we
now compost or rather grind up. I have not seen the plant. I
can't vouch for how convincing it is. The leftovers from their
process are small amount of innocuous ash which can be used as
soil conditioner simply landfilled. I understand from Malcolm
Pirnie that the vendor will be making a detailed presentation to
them later this month.
Now, why would you consider these processors and under
what circumstances? First, they offer a total solution completely
compatible with curbside recycling. They could allow you to drop
curbside recycling or increase it at your option. It's a matter of
economics and common sense. Recycling is not high tech or
high capital. It's best motivators are people of good will and a
very active county program to help people feel good and help
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June 11, 2001
them do it themselves. Second, Dr. Thomas has already told you
these conversion processes are kinder to the atmosphere, to the
environment apparently than the other alternatives. He's an
expert on this, and EPA has been saying the same things for
years. I thought the county would never depart from landfill, so I
threw away a whole file drawer of literature I had on the subject.
Now, under the right conditions the third reason you might
consider such processors -- under the right conditions, they may
have give a very reasonable cost per ton. The right conditions
are, you must have flow control of enough waste to keep the
plant full. Don't make Lake County's fatal error of having a plant
they couldn't fill up. The plant must be based on proven
technology offered by a totally reliable vendor who is willing to
operate the plant for at least three years if you choose. The
plant must be owned and operated by the county and financed on
about a 30-year bonded basis with Iow interest taxable bonds;
otherwise the capital charges will make the cost too high.
The plant must be Iow maintenance and maintained well, but it's
absolutely essential that you must find a way to get a decent
price for power, not merely the lowest incremental cost that
some power plant -- power company offers you. If you cannot do
that, you probably won't do waste-to-energy, and that's why the
curve of waste management plants versus years that Jack
showed you is flat. The energy price paid for the power is too
Iow. So there must be a way found to get a decent price for
power. You may want to consider the county becoming a
municipal power utility. These are common in Florida and highly
successful. That's why the City of Los Angeles today has no
power shortage and their prices are okay.
Now, what I say here will be considered highly optimistic by
cautious consultants. That is that you can perhaps reach down
into the 50 to 60 dollar a ton range by waste-to-energy. That's
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June 11,2001
optimistic but I worked for 50 years on projects with people who
know how to make difficult projects doable. I'm too damned old
to do it again, but at least I can cheer you on and steer you the
kinds of people that can do it should it be your pleasure. So I
think that a final advice I have is look before you leap. Don't buy
any process or any plant unless you go there and put your hand
on it and have your staff look at it and maybe even send Jim
Mudd to Australia for four weeks to work in the plant down there.
MR. RISTAU: It's only 22 hours in an airplane.
DR. STOKES: So I shall be very happy to help when I can,
and thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Now we enter the question-and-answer period. I
had envisioned this as a time, and I have some questions that
were -- were given by the audience. John, are there additional
ones?
MR. DUNNUCK.. No. You got them all.
MR. MUDD.. Okay. I've got them all?
MS. KRASOWSKI: How can you ask questions if you haven't
heard -- if you haven't heard the speakers? Seriously, know
before at the beginning, I mean, you know, different speakers,
and you need to be able to hear what they say--
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Ma'am -- ma'am, the order of the
workshop is that these were experts who made their
presentations. You can write down any question and give it here.
We will address it. You also have five minutes under public
participation to sign up on a sheet and come and speak.
MR. KRASOWSKI: Isn't there going to be a discussion?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Bob, I will run the meeting. Thank you.
MR. KRASOWSKI: It's a question.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioners may ask questions,
that's; why they're coming back to the table. We will follow
process tonight. This will be an orderly meeting. We will be
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June 11,2001
ladies and gentlemen dealing with ladies and gentlemen. Anyone
that can't accept that, I will have the bailiff remove you from the
room. I have no problem doing that, so please let's do it the way
we need to do it. You're all great people. I thank you for being
here. Let's proceed, Mr. Mudd.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Mr. Chairman or Mr. Mudd, I just
didn't understand one point and that is, did questions have to be
turned in already, or could somebody be writing out their
question at this point?
MR. MUDD.. If they -- if they have questions, ma'am, they can
-- they can turn them in at any time to get -- to get -- if they had a
question during the briefing, there are additional question sheets
in the front, and this I'll give directly to the speakers that they
have the question. The speaker will read the question for the
audience and then answer it, and if you have questions you can
do the same. Following the question-and-answer period, then
we'll open it up to public comment, and the public comment
sheets are also on the front, and I have some 13 now that are
sitting here in the front of the table, and they'll have a five-
minute period of time in order to answer.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE.. So just to make it clear, ma'am,
you were worried about that you couldn't ask questions earlier.
The forms are here. Please feel free to fill them out now and
bring them on up any time during the the next part of the
process.
MR. MUDD: If you would like to start, Dr. Jones, with your
question.
DR. JONES: Yeah. This question came from Arlene Bower, I
believe, and it's a planted question by my good friend
Dr. Connett, and the question is, after the multi millions of dollars
in your error -- my error -- in recommending that an electrostatic
precipitator would be sufficient for safety in Detroit, why should
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June 11, 2001
your opinion hold water here? Well, that's an absolutely false
statement. When the Detroit incinerator was permitted, it was
permitted under the federal guidance at that time relative to air
pollution control, and electrostatic precipitators were state of
the art at that time, and since that time the new federal
regulations have come into place, and that facility was
retrofitted just as Pinellas County is being retrofitted. It only had
the electrostatic precipitators on it until a few years ago, and it's
being retrofitted, so no way did I have anything to do with the
decision about the technology that was put on the Detroit
incinerator.
DR. CONNETT: Can I respond to that, please? I happened to
be in Detroit at that time. I even took part in a debate on live
television with Dr. Jones. He was asked by citizens and he was
asked by representatives of the Canadian government about his
claim that electrostatic precipitators were state of the art for
control of dioxin. I pointed out at that time that that was
nonsense and he should have known it was nonsence. At that
time it was well known that limes -- a combination of lime
scrubbers and back houses were more effective for removing
dioxin. He denied that, but within -- when he talks about now it
was retrofitted like other plants, but he hasn't pointed out that
this had to be retrofitted within just two or three years of the
start up of the largest incinerator in the world. It cost Detroit
millions of dollars to do that, and it was based upon his
testimony that they went ahead with electrostatic precipitators
knowing full well that there was better equipment there. The
Canadian government even took out a lawsuit on that.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I'm sorry to be ignorant, but
electrostatic precipitators are a method for removal of dioxin
from the waste-to-energy process?
DR. CONNETT: No. They are actually particulate control
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June 11,2001
devices.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I see.
DR. CONNETT: They're not -- two things; they're not very
good at the smallest particles. That's why fabric filters were
preferred and, secondly, it's now become apparent that much of
the dioxin that comes out of an incinerator is actually made in
the air pollution control devices, and the highest emissions came
from these facilities including the Detroit incinerator where the
gases went into the electrostatic precipitator above 200 degrees
Celsius.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And but current technology does
not include this method? So what we are --
DR. CONNETT.- No. No. No. Today it's .- it's accepted what
the Canadian government was saying, what citizens and I were
saying and I was saying in that live TV debate and Dr. Jones
denied on live television. I've got the videotape. We can make
that available.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I don't know where we're going
with this, but do you think we can get back to the subject,
material at hand, where we are as far as today goes? I could
care less what happened back 10, 15 years ago. I want to know
where we are today as far as the technology goes.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Next question, please.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Thank you, Tom.
MR. RISTAU: Just one at a time?
MR. MUDD: One at a time.
MR. RISTAU: Okay. That'll be fine. The -- this is from
Dexter Bellamy, I believe it is. Thank you, Mr. Dexter. "Why have
there been no more waste-to-energy plants built in the -- the
United States -- "1'11 caveat that" -- in the past six years if it's
such a good -- good plan?" There's two reasons why. First of all,
the major cities that needed them already have them and
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June 11,200t
operating. As you take -- if you would take a map and show
where these waste-to-energy facilities are, they're predominantly
on the East Coast, and that's the reason there are so many
facilities -- one of the reasons here is that you have water on one
side, people on the other, and no rooms for landfill, so those
communities responded early on in the -- in the '80s to build
waste-to-energy plants.
The other factor here is pure economics. Today in the East
Coast, in Pennsylvania, Virginia there are mega landfills. When I
say mega landfills, these are commercial landfills that are
bringing trash in at ten to twelve to fifteen thousand tons per day
being shipped from all places on the East Coast including New
York City and even down from Massachusetts, from Canada. So
these huge landfills are offering very Iow prices. So a community
sometimes makes the decision, "why even bother with a disposal
plant internally? Why plan? We'll just simply go out in the
market. We'll take whatever the lowest cost disposal option is,
and we'll just simply bid it out every so many years." And that's
what we have in the last ten years or so in the United States,
huge mega landfills offering prices in the 15 to $20 ton -- tons per
day, dollars per ton area, and sometimes even lower simply to
get customers, so that's the reason we have less landfills
nowadays, one of the major reasons.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Does this have to -- it doesn't
have anything to do with permits being refused?
MR. RISTAU: No. What we have -- we've had is a
consolidation of land -- waste-to-energy plants where the smaller
ones that had to be even more stringent standards decided not to
do it for economic reasons, and we've gone -- we're down to --
we're at a hundred waste-to-energy plants now. Most of those
changes have been done because of the economics.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I was wondering if anyone could
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June 11, 2001
challenge that?
DR. CONNETT: No. I'm not going to challenge that, but I
have something else to say, though.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Is -- you're saying that the
smaller incinerators are economically feasible?
MR. RISTAU: Not -- certainly not with the advanced air
emission control technologies required.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: How many tons a day are we
talking, the small one?
MR. RISTAU: You could go as small as 50 tons per day, and
it's generally recognized small combustion facilities is --
something less than 250 tons per day is considered small.
DR. CONNETT: I'd like to -- can I respond to that? I don't
think Jack is quite accurate when he says they saturated the
market, because if you go back into the '80s, I'm not quite sure of
the date, '87, '88, they were talking then about the building of
nearly 400 municipal waste incinerators in this country. The fact
that they've got 102 and some of those were already operating at
that time means that they have not got what they anticipated. In
fact, over 300 trash incinerator proposals have been defeated
since 1985 in this country, and I would like to draw your
attention, I think, to the last one that was built some six or so
years ago in Rollins outside Chicago. That was a Foster Wheeler
plant that Mr. Stokes was talking about. That is being sold off.
It's not viable and -- but I would reinforce what Mr. Ristau said
that it is a question of economics, and it is very important that
people understand those economics.
New Jersey wanted to build 22 trash incinerators in 1985.
They only got five. Now those five incinerators have an
accumulated debt of 1.6 billion dollars, and they cannot pay that
debt, and it's precisely the reason that Jack indicated. It's
cheaper for the waste haulers to take their waste to landfills in
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June 11, 2001
Pennsylvania at $45 a ton than to take it to the incinerators at
$90 a ton. Now, the response of the incinerator industry is to
drop their tipping fee to about $45 a ton in order to capture this
waste which means they can continue to operate and continue to
make electricity and continue to sell that electricity, but what
they can't do now is to pay off the huge capital cost, the
operating -- and those costs, as I say, are 1.6 billion dollars. And
if you look around the United States, there are similar situations
to that. So it's really important to look at this economically.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Can I just add that -- that in my
limited bit of research so far, that even holds true in South
Florida where Palm Beach, for example, has -- I think it's Palm
Beach who has an incinerator that's under .- underutilized, and
that's because it's cheaper to haul the garbage to Georgia than it
is to burn it in the incinerator there. So we have examples of
that right in our backyard.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Dr. Stokes.
DR. STOKES: I would like to respond on the Foster Wheeler
Plant in Robbinsville, Illinois, outside of Chicago. That's a very
interesting case. Here was a fine modern plant built to separate
the waste and then burn the prepared fuel. The Foster Wheeler
Corporation in good faith accepted the pledge of the municipality
involved or the state agency to guarantee the bonds. Halfway
through the deal, they backed out on the guarantee, and Foster
Wheeler had to pick up on its balance sheet the debt.
Now, what I want to emphasize to you is don't go into waste.
to-energy unless, one, you like it, in other words, it does what
you want to do and, two, you have a good deal. If you make a
poor deal going into waste-to-energy, you will regret it for the
rest of your life. And there's -- as Dr. Connett has said all over
the country, there are these poor deals where people have
welshed, backed down, circumstances have changed.
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June 11, 2001
If you go into waste-to-energy, it's got to be ironclad, that
you have enough waste, you have a power contract and you have
a guarantor on the plant on its performance. Now, if it costs you
50 or $60 a ton and you can ship it to Georgia for 40, you may
decide to ship it to Georgia. Or you may decide that the little bit
of extra cost to have a total solution in the county is a better
deal. That's up to the county to decide.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Dr. Stokes, if I may ask a
question. You are familiar with the power-- the waste-to-energy
plant in Lee County. Would you consider that one a success?
DR. STOKES: Technically, it's certainly a great success on --
on a standpoint of economics. The tipping fee is high, but at
least nobody is suing anybody. They have enough waste and
now they want to expand the plant because apparently they
prefer more incineration to more landfill.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE.. The point being it depends on
how Iow you set your standards on whether or not you consider it
to be a success. Because nobody's suing anybody that makes it
a winner.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I think we discussed that pretty well.
I think we need to move to the next question. We have a number
of them here, so I would like to keep it moving.
DR. CONNETT: I'm asked the question, "Is the ashes safe as
has been portrayed by Jack Ristau?"
Jack, you may have heard was talking about using this in
concrete and other -- other uses. I would point out that in
Germany the fly ash, that's the ash that's captured in the air
pollution control device, has to be sent to a hazardous waste
facilities. They send them to salt mines. In other words, they
are treating fly ash as serious as they treat nuclear waste.
So there's no question at all that fly ash is extremely toxic. The
fly ash is anything from 10 to 15 percent of your total ash. The
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June 11,2001
bottom ash is less toxic. What we allow in the United States is
the mixing of the fly ash and the bottom ash before it's tested.
This was a complete giveaway to the industry by the -- by the
EPA, and I could go into the details of that if you wanted me to.
But sufficit to say that the fly ash is extremely toxic. This should
not be mixed with anything, and there's very little ash at this
moment that is being used in concrete or road building in this --
in this country.
Now, just still on the ash issue. You notice there was a
contradiction between Dr. Jones's analysis of ash and Mr.
Ristau's. Now, Dr. Jones said you don't have to worry about the
dioxin in the ash because it's going to be sequestered in
concrete, in monofills. It's going to be all by itself. It's not going
to come into contact with garbage or anything. It's there. It's
going to be sequestered. And then we heard from Jack it's
gonna -- it's used as landfill cover.
Now, Mr. Jones -- Professor .- Dr. Jones' own calculations
indicate that in the Spokane incinerator in Washington state a
hundred times more dioxin is captured on the fly ash, remains on
the ash than comes out of the stack. So when he did his analysis
comparing the amount of dioxin that was going into the
incinerator, he focused only on the -- on the dioxin that was
coming out of the stack, and he then took the fly ash and
conveniently said, "This is going to be sequestered in landfills, in
monofills; it's not going to come into contact with the
environment" and yet you hear the practice is common. I think
it's common in this state to send that mixed ash and use it for
daily cover on landfills where it's immediately open to the
elements, to the -- to the rain, in our case -- to snow and to wind.
All kinds of things can move those toxics around.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. We have rebuttals from Dr.
Jones and also from you, sir.
Page 45
June 11,2001
MR. RISTAU: Yes. At the same time since we're on the ash
issue, Michael Delate wrote a -- a question here. I would like to
pick it up now because it goes right in here. "Mr. Ristau
indicated that the incinerator ash may quote 'for now' be
disposed at typical sanitary landfill. Does this 'for now' mean
that regulations are being proposed or considered that would
require the ash to be disposed of at a certified hazardous waste
landfill?"
First of all, no, it doesn't, and the "for now" means in my
sense is that if you can beneficially use the ash, you should go
ahead and do so, and for now most people are putting it in the
landfill. I think there's a better option is to use it for other
beneficial use which includes using it in landfills for cover
material, or some states have even looked at using it for
concrete or for road building materials.
The fact is, this material by EPA is tested. The ash is tested
and certified whether it's hazardous or not hazardous. If it's
hazardous then it has to be disposed of, but today the ash is
considered is being tested -- is testing non-hazardous, and that's
why it can go to your landfill right along with your -- with your
banana peels or be used as a cover right alongside the other
materials. The material is non-hazardous; that's why it goes to
your regular landfill.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Dr. Jones.
DR. JONES: Yeah. I would -- I would just suggest that
anybody who wants to see what this material looks like is to go
out to a landfill or a -- a ash monofill and look and see what it
looks like because after about two hours it sets up like concrete.
I could bring a block of it and set it -- it's not going to go
anywhere.
I was asked the question .- again, it was a planted question -
- "How much dioxin was found when the fly ash was tested and
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June 11, 2001
where did the ash go in the studies I quoted"? There's a total
mass balance done around the Spokane incinerator, including the
bottom ash and the fly ash that were tested separately, and that
ash is combined and is trucked to a secure monofill in Kittitas
County in Washington. So it goes to a secure landfill. It does not
go to a sanitary landfill. In fact, I think that most states now
require that the -- that the ash be disposed of in a monofill or in a
separate part of the landfill, not mixed with the waste. And
there's tests and the literature shows that nor does the dioxin or
other things leach out of this material. There's just no way it can
happen. And .- so that answers that question, and should we
stay on the ash issue?
MR. MUDD: You have another ash question?
MR. RISTAU: No, I don't. But, anyway, the answer to the
question was that the ash was sampled simultaneously during
the study period, and it is disposed of in a -- in an ash monofill.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: If I understand, both levels are tested
separately, you said, or the bottom ash and a top ash?
MR. RISTAU: Bottom ash and I'd have to -- I don't recall
whether we analyzed them separately or collectively, but it is
disposed collectively so -- so the numbers that I pointed out was
the composite concentration in .- in -- in the ash.
DR. CONNETT: I'd like to just respond to Jack -- Jack's
comment about the EPA testing shows that it's non-hazardous. I
think this is a function of the testing. It's very, very important for
people to understand that the law requires a leachate test. The
law is trying to ascertain whether this material is safe to put into
a regular landfill or whether it should go to a hazardous waste
landfill. This is a leachate test. There is no requirement to find
the absolute levels of toxic metals or dioxin in that ash to which
people can be exposed.
Right now in England there's a huge scandal about this ash
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June 11,2001
being used on paths in alotments where the levels of dioxin in
these -- near where chickens and food is grazing, 9,500
nanograms per gram. This is astronomical. That's nine times
higher than the CDC's action level for soil. So the -- as far as the
actual testing is concerned, which gives you this non-hazardous
label, I think this is very unfortunate because there are many
workers in these plants who do not recognize that if they breathe
this stuff or chew their fingernails and get the ash into their
system, they're getting some toxic material, especially the fine
dust in these facilities.
Secondly, the people are not being warned who live near
landfills that this toxic material, that you should not touch it or
breathe it. Now, the reason why the EPA's testing, the leachate
test is giving them this non-hazardous label is rather cynical
because the reason is because you now use lime in the
scrubbing systems; it makes the ash very alkaline and that alkali,
the lime, buffers the acid that you're adding to see what would
happen if it came into contact with acid conditions over an
extended period of time.
Now, when the EPA determined how this thing was going to
be tested, they allowed the fly ash to be tested mixed with the
bottom ash. Now, why is that a giveaway? The answer is, the
lime is only in the fly ash. The bottom ash is naked. It would fail
in about a third of the time based upon previous tests. It would
fail about a third of the time for lead which leaching with lead if
you did the acid without the lime present. So the giveaway is by
allowing the fly ash and the bottom ash to be mixed before the
testing you take it away from the alkaline pH where water alone
would lead to failure, 19 times out of 20 in Claremont, New
Hampshire. But you take it down to pH which is neither acidic,
where the lead would come out, nor is it now alkaline; it's
somewhere in the middle.
Page 48
June 11, 2001
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I have a question about that.
DR. CONNETT: And so it passes -- it passes the -- the test.
Therefore, the ash that the industry is anxious to protect is the
ash that's produced in the largest quantity, namely, the bottom
ash. And their people -- their own people said in 1986, if the ash
is classified as hazardous, this is the end of the incinerator
industry.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Commissioner Henning, I know you
have a question, and so I'll respect your technical and academic
experience in here, but I feel like I'm sitting in a discussion with
mangrove experts and each one has a point of view on how to
save the mangroves, so I think we've got to keep this -- you
know, I'll let Dr. Jones answer-- answer back to that, but I don't
want to get into a big debate tonight. You both have points. It's
way beyond me how the EPA arrives at the testing centers.
Commissioner Henning.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Well, once an ash .- you stated
an ash -- it goes to an ash landfill and turns into a solid, a brick.
Does it always stay that way or introducing water would turn it
into a softer material?
MR. RISTAU: No. It sets up almost like concrete and looks
like pavement, and they've done a lot of tests in terms of doing
tests in landfills with monofills like this and collecting of
leachate, and they find -- they find nothing. So it sets up
basically almost like concrete.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What kind of leachate testing --
what have they determined from a leachate? Is there --
MR. RISTAU: Well, rainfall passing through a landfill. Like a
leachate system, they test the leachate. COMMISSIONER HENNING: Right.
MR. RISTAU: And all the literature shows that there's no
dioxins in that leachate.
Page 49
June tl,2001
DR. JONES: And there's been extensive studies on testing
the water that comes from that, and what you find basically in
that water that after it comes through -- it does come in contact
with that, basically salts and it's -- most cases it meets clean
water drinking standards for metal. You wouldn't drink the
water, but I'm saying it's not -- it's certainly a lot more preferable
than, let's say, leachate from a landfill. A lot less gross and all
those other things so it's basically benign.
In our facility in Broward we take the water from the
monofill and use it as process water. We take it and use it for
quenching of ash, and we reuse it in the facility rather than
discharge it. So--
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Thank you. Can we go to the
next question, please?
MR. MUDD: Dr. Stokes.
DR. STOKES: You seldom get on these panels the kind of
question you want, but I'm very lucky. I have one from a lovely
lady named Michelle Krasowski which is just a wonderful
question. "You state that the delay for an incinerator-based
decision was to wait for money and technology. Isn't this selling
the issue of environmental protection short?" The answer to the
question is, yes. It is selling it short, and I apologize, Dr. Jones,
for calling you Dr. Thomas.
DR. JONES: Thank you, Dr. Stokes.
DR. STOKES: But as we've heard here today, we're probably
selling waste-to-energy short on an environmental basis because
it appears to be somewhat safer than other methods. So
Michelle has asked me just the most wonderful question, and she
goes on to say, "You may think only of the money, but I think of
my future home as a burnt out shell. I'm not looking for a deal.
I'm looking for a planet to live on."
Now, if Dr. -- if Dr. Connett continues, we'll all be frightened away
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from this planet. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'm beginning to get the feeling I have
an IRS case against McDonald's but, yes, sir.
DR. JONES: I had a similar question from Michelle, and she
said, "Please explain the point of your 15-minute presentation on
dioxins when you never explained their origin and the prevention
of their production, nor the damage that they may do. If they
occur in combustion, then aren't they around naturally?"
The answer to that question is clearly, yes. In fact, this last year
when EPA was putting in its final inventory one of the major
sources they identified in the springtime is forest fires, and forest
fires occur in this country, of course, occur here in Florida, but in
the United States they're pretty much upwind of the food bill of
the United States, and one of the major mysteries is that where
are the dioxins coming from that we find in chickens and beef
and milk and so forth, and it sure isn't coming from the 102
waste-to-energy plants that you saw up there on the screen. It's
impossible. They're not even related to each other spatially.
But I will say that I think that diesel exhaust from trucks, trains,
maybe even aircraft is a -- is a great source of dioxins in the
environment because it's so close to the receptors. It's so close
to the receptors. When you look at the fingerprints in the
environmental median, dioxins have fingerprints just like our
hands, as Dr. Connett pointed out, and when you look at the
fingerprints in the soil and in the air and in our flesh and in our
blood and so forth, they all have the same fingerprint as diesel
exhaust with one rare exception and that's the production of
pentachlorophenol which happen to have the same sort of
fingerprint.
So I contend that we'll always have dioxin in our
environment as long as we have any form of combustion,
whether it be the combustion of coal. I've done studies of pure
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wood waste combustion and there's dioxin in wood waste
combustion. So it's there. It's in our food stuff. Maybe it's going
to be decreasing over time. We found that there was quite a bit
of dioxin from leaded fuels, automobiles. Well, now we don't
have leaded fuels, so that source is pretty minimal, but it's out
there. It's always going to be circulating in the environment, and
the point I was trying to make is that on a mass basis we see
what's in the waste, it's been measured in our waste, it's going to
keep recirculating in the waste. What I tried to point out is that
you're recirculating it in a much greater extent when you're
composting it and putting it back in the environment. That's the
only point I tried to make, and that has to be looked at.
DR. CONNETT: I must respond to this. The point I was
trying to make earlier is before you accept the -- the -- the
calculations of Dr. Jones, you better study his track record.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I don't think we need to get into
this.
DR. CONNETT: No. This is very important. I'm sorry. This
is very important. It -- I'm going to give you a calculation from
Doctor-- incidentally, Dr. Jones' analysis on diesel and forest
fires, he has presented before the EPA in the same advisory
committee that I was involved in. They rejected his analysis.
If you look at the EPA's inventory, they do not put diesel
emissions high, nor do many other countries, nor do they put
natural sources like forest fires high. So he may still want to
believe that, but he hasn't convinced the EPA. Now, in 1990 --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Excuse me, sir, what happened to
yours?
DR. CONNETT: What's that?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: What happened to yours?
DR. CONNETT: Well, I'll tell you what I presented at the
same --
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CHAIRMAN CARTER: No. I want to know what they
accepted.
DR. CONNETT: Well, I'm just about to tell you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay.
DR. JONES: May I interrupt?
DR. CONNETT: No. No. Can I please--
DR. JONES: I want to interrupt here because what I think
what's happened here -- this is not fair to the audience that we're
starting the mudslinging.
DR. CONNETT: I'm not slinging any mud. This is just
published data, and I want to explain the published data. The
published data .- this is all published. In 1990 Dr. Jones did a
calculation on the total emissions as he estimated from all
municipal waste incinerators in the United States, and his
calculation was 379.8 grams. When we did the calculation for
the emissions from just 14 of the 130 incinerators, we found over
4,000 grams. In fact, one or two incinerators put out even more
than he had calculated for all the incinerators in the United
States. And so now there are reasons for those kind of mistakes,
but you have to hold people to their track record. He's told you
that diesels are number one, forest fires, and EPA doesn't agree
with him. He did these calculations on incinerators. He said
379.8 grams, here's -- here's the reference in a peer-reviewed
paper that we have published. We did the calculations for just 14
incinerators; it's over 4,000 grams at that time.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If I may ask a question?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Time out. Time out. Commissioner
Coletta and then Mr. Mudd has a question.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Yeah. I have a question. I'm
trying to relate to something that I have had hands on and
walked through and seen. Can you relate this to the incinerator
in Fort Myers? This might be a little bit easier for me to
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understand than from examples from all over the country with
different types of techniques. If you could relate to that, that
would be a tremendous help to me.
DR. CONNETT: Yes. Well, I think -- very, very good. I -- from
what I understand this .- the Lee County incinerator is operating
pretty well. It hasn't had the same economic catastrophe of
some of the other incinerators. However, as far as the emissions
are concerned, you've got to remember that dioxins are only
measured once a year. The company gets about a month's
notice that they're going to be monitored. They collect a sample
for six hours. They do that three times, and then they send it
away to a lab, and a few months later somebody will know what
was coming out on that particular day.
Now, two Belgian scientists, Defray and Weavers, presented
in Stockholm in 1998 a test of how reliable a six-hour test was,
and they did a side-by-side measurements with a six-hour
collection of dioxin and a two-week collection of dioxin, and they
found 30 to 50 times more dioxin calculated from the two-week
test than from the six-hour test. So, unfortunately, what we're
being treated to by this industry is absolutely ideal numbers, but
there are many more issues beyond the .- I asked you what Lee
County is doing with their ash. What they're doing with their ash.
This is -- I mean, these are some of the key issues here.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: If I may ask you again. I'm still
trying to get an answer to a question, and I appreciate your
patience with me. I -- I don't have the background that you have
in this subject, but Lee County -. the ash that's the emittance
that's coming out of this particular incinerator is just about
invisible, of course, to the naked eye, but obviously there's
something coming out. Do you consider what's coming out of
there is a great danger to the population of Lee County?
DR. CONNETT: Possibly-- possibly, yes. We do not know.
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We know that municipal waster incineration is the largest source
of dioxin. I'm not going to deny -- I'm not going to deny that
they've got better over 15 years, but it's terribly expensive to get
to that point, and when you've got to that point, you've got the
Cafka S (phonetic} situation that having collected all these
toxics in your fly ash, then the industry wants to spread it around
in concrete blocks and road building. That doesn't make sense.
The dioxin is on that fly ash, and Dr. Jones has indicated it's a
hundred times more dioxin on the fly ash than on .- in the air
emissions. So you can't have one without the other. You can't
say, oh, our air emissions are great, but don't worry about what
we do with the ash.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I was just approaching one part
of it. Let's go to the other part, the fly ash. DR. CONNETT: Yes. Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: The fly ash that Lee County is
mixing in with the lime and the regular ash from the incinerator --
DR. CONNETT: Yes.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- and, third, depositing it in the
landfill with the leach system and everything else presents a real
danger to the citizens of Lee County; is that correct?
DR. CONNETT: I think it's an unnecessary danger.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: But is it a real and present
danger? Everything has some danger.
DR. CONNETT: Well, everything has some danger, but this
one is unnecessary, and it's extremely expensive. If you're going
to spend a lot of money --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I'm not arguing about the
expense. I'm just trying to nail down one end of it so a
nontechnical person, such as myself, has a real understanding.
Forgive me for using Lee County as the only example, but it's the
only one I've been to and seen it, and I'm trying to get a grip on
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this from that. So what you're telling me is that the emission
from there by the standard that it's measured probably don't
present a tremendous danger, but by other standards that they
measure it where they take the emission over a week period,
then they get a high reading which, of course, would be
understandable when you've got something exposed to the thing
over a week's time.
DR. CONNETT: Oh, no. No. It's not -- sorry.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: That's why I'm repeating it back
to you.
DR. CONNETT: Okay. Thank you. Thank you for your doing
that because --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA.. Thank you for your patience.
DR. CONNETT: It's -- it's normalized. In other words, you're
talking -- we're talking about concentration. The concentration
with the six-hour test was .25 nanograms per cubic meter.
That's a concentration.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Whatever that means.
DR. CONNETT: And -- and -- it's just a concentration, how
much was in a cubic meter of gas.
So when they did the two-week test, they also calculated the
concentration in a cubic meter of gas. The fact that the one was
collected over six hours and the other one over two weeks, it
wasn't -- obviously, you would get more coming out, total mass in
two weeks those six hours. I'm not saying that. If you look -- if
you calculate the concentration, the concentration -. the average
concentration was 30 to 50 times higher than the six-hour test.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So what you're saying is it's a
cumulative effect, is that this --
DR. CONNETT: No. No. What I'm saying is that when you --
you put in a probe at six hours, you're measuring the facility
under ideal conditions. We are looking at the difference between
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theory and practice. When you look at it in two weeks, you're
looking at the possibility of upset conditions. You're looking at
startup and shutdown. All of these situations are when larger
quantities of dioxin are produced; that is captured in the two-
week test, but it's not captured in the six-hour test. So you're --
you're getting a snapshot when you're on a videotape in terms of
being able to calculate the total impact on the environment.
That's all.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE.. He's basically -- I think he's
saying -- see if I'm getting it that they -- they select the most
profitable time for testing, and what you're saying is it's an
inaccurate amount of time for testing in order to be able to get
an adequate measure.
DR. CONNETT: I'm not saying that it's necessarily done with
chicanery. I'm just saying they get a month's notice and that the
measurements are made under ideal circumstances. You get a
steady state, and if something goes wrong when you're testing,
they stop testing.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Oh, okay. That makes sense.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a
minute. I would want to know if that's factual or not. When
people start saying "we," I don't know what that means, number
one. I'm not going to argue with any one of the experts here.
You're all very knowledgeable. You're wonderful people, but I
think we're getting some inferences in this discussion, and I
would really prefer that we move on with the questions.
We do understand that there may be a possibility that there
is a better testing procedure, but I could go and ask the same
question about the City of Philadelphia where the incinerator is
in downtown Philadelphia, literally. What's going on there if it's
such a problem? So I would like to move on to the other
questions.
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DR. CONNETT: Excuse me. There is no incinerator in
Philadelphia.
DR. STOKES: Well, there's one in Nashville, and it will do
just as well.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Thank you, Dr. Stokes, for
bailing me out again for Rock City.
DR. JONES: There is an incinerator -- several incinerators in
the suburbs. There's one in Camden, New Jersey, and there's
one in Montgomery County, and there's one just south of the city,
so there's three that I know of. There's three that I know of.
There's three major incinerators operating in -- in the suburbs.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Well, it's a point well taken the testing
is testing, and what's the criteria and what is the overall effect
on the environment? What are the risks and everything because
that can be sorted out I think at another forum.
MR. MUDD: You want to go to -- Dr. Connett, you have the
next question, sir?
DR. CONNETT: Yes. Yes. Let's get on incineration for a
moment. "Could you expand on creative innovations and
business opportunities." That was asked by two people. Let me
just run down very quickly because I don't want to take up too
much time. Urban Ore in Berkeley, California, a reuse operation,
been in operation for, I think, 19 years now, 21 jobs -- well-paid
jobs, 1.5 million dollar gross.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What is their jobs?
DR. CONNETT: They take objects like stuff that gets
chucked every day at the landfill, sofas, furniture, and all kinds of
appliances everything else. In some cases they repair them, in
other cases they just push them back into the --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Resorting? Sorting?
DR. CONNETT: Yeah, yeah, yeah. But it's -- it's -- they take
the reusable objects. The important message here is that
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recycling is high volume, Iow value. You know, lots and lots of
little things, aluminum cans. But reuse is Iow volume, high value,
and it's something that can be made into a business. It's
something that can actually finance recycling programs if it's
done voluntarily.
In Gwelth, Ontario, they have an operation called Hobo
Hardware which is a whole warehouse -- a whole hardware store
which is completely supplied with secondhand materials.
Another very exciting innovation, especially for this area where
you're dealing with construction and demolition debris in a big
way, is that there are now companies that specialize not in
demolition but deconstruction taking buildings apart slowly
recovering the materials and generating a lot of jobs in the
process.
COMMISSIONER HENNING.. Mr. Connett.
DR. CONNETT: Yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can you give us an example of
the -- how much money these people are making individually. Is
it 100,000 a year? Is it $20,000 a year? What is it?
DR. CONNETT: Well, that's a good question because it could
be bottom-of-the-barrel stuff, but in actual fact in Urban Ore, Dan
Napp, who is a former professor of sociology, is very, very
concerned that people are well paid. So these people are not
doing it -- they're not minimum wage. They have reasonable
wages above minimum wage in -- in San Francisco -- in the San
Francisco area, and they have good benefits, and that's why they
held on to it so -- the proof is in the pudding. They've held onto
their staff in some cases 15, 16, 17 years. So these are good
jobs, and I could also point you to Recycle North in the other
country -- other side of the country. Burlington in Vermont,
Recycle North, they recover small appliances, large appliances,
electrical goods, you know, audio video stuff.
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COMMISSIONER HENNING: Can I ask it in a different way?
DR. CONNETT: And computers. Let me -- please let me
finish, because I think it's important. In this case they've
incorporated job training. They have people being trained for six
months to repair in these different sections, and they too gross
three-quarters of a million, and they have got well-paid jobs.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: What's their W-27 What's the
figure say on the W-27
DR. CONNETT: I don't know.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Okay.
DR. CONNETT: I don't know, but I could -- I could find out.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Do we really know if these are
high-paid jobs or --
DR. CONNETT: These are not crappy jobs.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: It's a technical term.
DR. CONNETT: They are well paid and they have benefits
and they're being trained. They're being trained. I mean, some
of the people being trained, they're not only training them to get
the skills but they also train them job-hiring skills, how to
contact, do interviews and something. So you're moving people
from unemployed situations, desperate situations through the
system into jobs in -- in the marketplace. It's very exciting, and I
urge you to have a look at it because it is creative. It's
innovative and it's the kind of stuff that would go up in smoke if
you built an incinerator.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: May I -- Mr. Chairman, could I ask
how many other questions we have from the audience because I
know we have a lot of registered speakers waiting to speak.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We have 15 registered speakers, and I
need to deal with the rest of the questions.
DR. JONES: I've got -- I have just two remaining.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: For Dr. Stokes, you have any?
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DR. STOKES: I have no questions. I've got the best one.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Dr. Connett, do you have more
questions?
DR. CONNETT: Yeah. Well, I do have two questions on the
innovations, and since I've only got through a small fraction of
the innovations, perhaps I could just mention two or three more
quickly?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Very quickly.
DR. CONNETT: Very quickly. In Del Norte, which is the
northernmost part of California, they're taking crab shell waste
and making it into contact lenses and surgical stitches. It was a
horrible problem in the landfill. Here's this company called Eco
Nutrients has come in and tackling it. There was a botany
professor in -- in -- Berkeley, a guy called Louie Truesdell. He
didn't have enough many -- enough money to set up a composting
operation, but he went into the soil amendment business using
his scientific skill to blend waste from forestry agriculture, and
the municipality he makes over 20 different soils, and he's now
got a $7 million business, grossing $7 million. This is called
American Soil Products, Inc.
We have other companies that are taking wooden pallets
which would otherwise be crushed or burnt and making furniture
and flooring out of them. So it is -- the keyword here is "value
added." Recycling doesn't make money for a community.
Recycling saves money on the other options, but remanufacture.
If you can take those waste products and make things in this
area, that's called value added, and it changes the whole
economic picture.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Dr. Connett, if I may. I have a
question directly related to what you're talking about, and it does
sound quite interesting what you're trying to explain to us. What
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kind of facility would we need? What kind of startup money
would there be for something like this? Is it something you put
out for bid where they come in and actually buy this product in
advance? Could you tell me a little bit more? Give me details as
far as the space needed, the dollars needed, and what happens
to the final waste product which is the dry and the wet?
DR. CONNETT: Yeah. Well, those are two separate
questions. Let me do them one at a time. I think it would be
important to look at the Canberra model which set this up. Their
landfill looks more like an airport and then to offer out for bid the
materials that you know that you're going to get source
separated. If you offered them waste, I think you're going to get
waste companies. That's not what you want. You want to offer
the materials. Is anybody interested in this material, this
material, this material, this material? I know that there are three
companies in this audience right now who talked to us this
afternoon who would be most anxious to get some of that source
separated material for which they can take, for example -- just
give you one example. They could take waste oil, you know,
cooking oil from McDonald's, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and make
that into bio-diesel. That's a business right there.
So, I mean, I can't answer this overnight. I think the best thing
to do is to find the best operations in the world and go and
investigate it yourself. I told you about Halifax, Nova Scotia.
They've been able to make numerous businesses and created
3,000 jobs. They are very proud of what they've done. I think
they would be more than willing to send down people from the
government, Department of Environment and Labor. I can get
you the contact for these people. It's very exciting. It's very
exciting.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Those are all excellent possibilities
because I think up front you would agree, Dr. Connett, you've got
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to assess what's available going into your landfill. That would
give you some indication of what your products conceivably
could be and, therefore, you can get an idea what would work
and what wouldn't work. I think that's something we already
may have a pretty good handle on.
DR. CONNETT: Absolutely.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Dr. Ozores-Hampton, I think you have one
question that everybody has to answer.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: Oh, I passed it on actually.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: What a delegator.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: I really don't have an answer for
that question.
MR. MUDD: Okay.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: "What is the actual -- what is the
actuarial cost of accidents over a 30-year period for each
method?" And about composting, I really don't have any answer
for that. I don't think there is any reported accidents in terms of
composting process, somebody died, other than maybe using
mechanical equipment that is related to use of mechanical
equipment. But by the composting process, I don't think there is
any record to indicate that.
MR. MUDD: Dr. Connett.
DR. CONNETT: Yeah. Just like compost, accidents happen.
There have been a number of people killed in incinerators. Two
people were killed in the incinerator in Pennsylvania. And I'm
drawing a blank on the name of the town right now. DR. JONES: Lancaster.
DR. CONNETT: Lancaster. I -- I don't think this is a real
issue, quite frankly. I think accidents happen in every industrial
operation. They're going to happen in incinerators. They're
going to happen in landfills. They're going to happen in
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composting. They're going to happen in recycling.
MR. MUDD: Okay. Does anybody here disagree with that
last comment?
DR. JONES: The .- the point is, it's a relative risk if you're
hauling waste to a local landfill versus hauling all your waste to
Georgia. The statistical number of injuries and deaths are going
to be much higher for the haul. That's all I was trying to make to
you. It's something that's many times left out of the equation.
We haul our waste in Seattle 300 miles to a landfill in Eastern
Oregon, and we have train wrecks quite frequently. So it's just
something that should be factored because that's a real death.
It's not a hypothetical cancer death that I showed you up here.
Those are real folks getting hurt or killed. CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Sir, do you have another question in your pile? I
gave you quite a few.
DR. CONNETT: Yes. I have one more.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We need to take this question, and
then our recorder needs a break in a minute. Do that so we can
take your question and then let her have a break.
DR. CONNETT: The question is, "Is a few micrograms of
dioxin a health risk?" Well, the simple answer to that is if you
got a few micrograms into your body, it certainly would be a
health risk. We can see the difference in children in -- this was
an experiment done -- a study done in Holland in 1993. It was
published in the Lansett, May the 23rd, 1992, eight Dutch
scientists. And what they found you could tell the difference in
the activity of the thyroid gland. There was a significant
difference in the activity of the thyroid gland of children,
newborn babies at one week of age which could be related to the
exposure of dioxin to the mother and the use of indices of
exposure -- the level in mother's breast milk. The levels that they
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looked at in the high exposure -- so-called high exposure it was
about 36 parts per trillion in the fat as opposed to about 18 parts
per trillion in the fat of the -- of the Iow-exposed people.
So it does not take much dioxin in our bodies to cause a problem.
Now, the dioxin problem as I see it -- and let me say before we
get into big battle here I do believe that modern incinerators
have got a great deal better at controlling dioxins, but I think by
doing that they cost themselves out of the market. However, let
me try to explain the dioxin problem as I see it. Number one,
when the dioxin comes out of the stack, it's not what you breath.
It's what enters the food chain. In one day a cow puts about as
much dioxin into its body -- a free-grazing cow -- as you would get
if you breathe the air for 14 years, human breathing. Or to put it
another way, one quart of cow's milk would give you about 18
months -- 8 months of breathing next to that cow. So the -- while
the stack dilutes, the food chains reconcentrate, cows, chickens,
fish, and so on, and most of our dioxin today comes to us from
food.
Now, the second problem is that once the dioxin is in the
body it has a very large half life. Normally we get rid of fat-
soluable toxics by converting them into water-soluable
derivatives, and then we can excrete them through the kidney. It
doesn't work with dioxins. Instead, they accumulate in our fat.
A man can't get rid of them a woman can. It's called having a
baby. And so when she has a baby, then she passes onto the
baby what she stored up for 20, 25, 30 years, and that's
essentially -- if you read the fine print of the EPA's reassessment
on dioxin which has been in the works now for ten years, that's
their level of concern, that we are passing on to our babies the --
the toxic materials which are the most potent disregulators of
human metabolism that we've -- we've ever studied in a
laboratory that's made -- made by man.
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The good news is they're coming down in the environment.
The good news is there's no permanent damage here because
these are not mutagens. They don't cause mutations on the
DNA. That's the very, very good news, but I think it's generally
agreed that we have too much dioxin right now -- right now in our
food, too much in our bodies, far too much in our babies. We
shouldn't be putting any more in if we can possibly avoid it. And
I think that these mass-burn incinerators are one place that we
can avoid it because it is not a long-term solution, and it's
extremely expensive, and there are better alternatives.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. We need to take five for our
recorder, please.
(Recess taken.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Ladies and gentlemen -- ladies and
gentlemen, may I have your attention, please. If you would all
take your seats, the panel return to the table. If you have cell
phones -- you've been good. We're going to start, folks, whether
you're ready or not. We're going to do it. Okay. Cell phones off,
please. You've been great about it. You've been a wonderful
audience. Let's keep it going. We've had some interesting
debates with the panel members. They have four more
questions, then we're going to public comment. Thank you.
MR. MUDD: I'd ask that -- I'd ask -- first of all, I'd like to ask
the panelists if they would be so kind to -- to once you're finished
with your questions, try to keep those and then pass them back
to me so I can get those in public record. I've been asked by the
court recorder if we could collect those questions at the end so
that she can -- she can make them a permanent part of the
proceedings of this workshop.
Mr. Ristau, you have two questions?
MR. RISTAU: Yes. And they're somewhat related, so I'll
read them together and answer them jointly. This is from Mark
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Olson. "What assurance can you give -- give the community tip
fees at a waste-to-energy plant will never increase more than CPI
(Consumer Price Index) annually?" The other related question, I
apologize, A..sfaha Tesfal, T-e-s-f-a-i or L, I believe. I'm sorry. I
apologize. Is your company willing to build the plant with its
balance sheet and then charge the county for the material
disposed? If so, about how much will it cost in dollars per ton for
a 500-ton-per-day waste-to-energy plant?"
The two are related, and I think we can deal with them.
First of all, I redo Mr. Olson's question, what assurance can you
give that -- to the community that any waste processing process
will never increase. And that's really what you're facing in any --
any choice you make. The anticipation of price increases always
remain there. Nothing stays the same. Everything moves and
changes. So no matter what technology you pick or what
combination of technologies and solutions, price increases are a
fact of life in more cases than not. And plus -- well, that answers
that, I think, and are you willing to build a plant for $500 (sic)? In
response to the consultants we were asked or posed a similar
question. The fact is it's very difficult if not impossible to
determine what a plant will cost today given that we don't know
who's going to own the plant, where it's going to be located,
what the energy pricing is --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Your paper's on the microphone.
MR. RISTAU: Oh, I apologize -- where the plant is located,
what the mix of responsibilities will be between the county or
this -- or the community and the plant owner. So those -- all
those questions go into the analysis of the price. I think if I
could step back just one point is -- is that being fiscally
responsible, we all are for our own homes and businesses, when
you take a look at whatever that system is, it's certainly
encumbant on everyone to figure in and factor in all the costs,
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and clearly recycling has a cost, waste-to-energy has a cost,
landfilling, all those components.
If you can fairly judge it on a dollar per ton, you can see
what the mix one -- one-- one component larger may affect the
other component in price and ups and downs so that system --
your engineers or your consultants will help you on that
processes combining the whole combination and figuring out
what the cost is. But, clearly, all components will have a cost.
Recycling isn't free. Waste-to-energy isn't free. Landfilling isn't
free. C&D disposal isn't free. Yard waste composting isn't free.
There is a real cost, a quantifiable cost if you look hard enough.
Too often we see communities simply doing a hand wave and
saying, "Well, if we're doing this we really don't have to" --
because it's good -- "we don't really have to judge the cost, or we
don't have to worry about the cost because we're having the
homeowner do it for free." Nothing is free. In order to get
something out of it, you have to put something into it, and that's
the precaution or the advisement that I have in this. Figure out
what the whole-system cost is on a reasonable basis and include
all costs, real or imaginary.
MR. MUDD: Did that answer your two questions, sir?
MR. RISTAU: Yes, that's the two questions.
MR. MUDD: Thank you. Dr. Jones?
DR. JONES: The first question was from Sheri Barnett, and
she said, "Is there a difference in the dioxin measurement when
a landfill is being filled with the ash from a waste-to-energy plant
versus a general waste stream?"
If-- if you're talking about the ash being disposed in an ash
monofill, you would not anticipate having any gasey emissions,
and therefore you would not have a gas collection system and,
therefore, would not produce any dioxins from the combustion of
that gas. What I was talking about is if you take municipal solid
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waste and put it in landfill and it starts to decompose, it
generates gas. Other than just methane, it generates a lot of
other nasty gases, vinyl chloride measured from the surface of
benzene and so forth.
Now, we don't know those measurements, whether related
to historic poor landfill practice or just what, but complex
organic compounds can be generated in the decomposition of
waste but -- so the dioxins, though, are from the combustion of
that gas just like the combustion in an incinerator. So I hope this
answered that question.
The -- the last question came from Ken Heritage and he said,
"Waste-to-energy plants have been in operation for over 30 years
in Europe, America, and especially Japan. Is there any hard
evidence of local health problems?" The only thing I can relate to
is that there have been measurements made around facilities of
cows' milk in Connecticut by the Agricultural Department in the
State of Connecticut, and they have not found any increases in
the -- in the milk from the control farm versus the farms near the
facility. The same thing was done in -- in Maryland in
Montgomery County, Maryland, where there's a new facility
there, and they also traced cows' milk before and after the
facility was built. More recently in the State of Pennsylvania in
Harrisburg there's an older facility that's been operating there for
15 or so years which is a really high emitter of dioxins, and they
are going through the process of considering the retrofit of that
facility. And the state health department conducted a -- a cancer
cjuster examination by looking at the census track data for
cancers to look and see if whether there was any increase in
cancers in the area that higher influence of the stack versus
lower influence, because you can portray where the plume has
the impacts on an annual basis.
They -- again, I thought I was going to have some of that
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data here tonight, but the epidemiologist could not furnish that,
but he did write a letter to the Department of Environmental
Protection in the State of Pennsylvania said they found no
increases in cancers based on the census track cancer data, and
there's been -- I think, there's been other studies along those
lines, too, but my personal knowledge is that there's been, at
least as far as the United States goes, there's been no evidence.
In fact, I conducted a soil study in Norfolk, Virginia, again, near
an older facility, one of the high emitters that Dr. Connett
accused me of leaving out of the equation, which I didn't do. But,
anyway, we made measurements of soil, and we found no
evidence of any impact in the soil around that facility. In fact,
most of all the high dioxin levels were found along the freeway in
Norfolk, Virginia.
MR. RISTAU: And just to add that since -- it's also important
to note the differentiation between old facilities and new
facilities. And what I believe you were referring to, Doctor, the
size of the new facilities indicate no problems. What has
happened -- you take a look at what may have happened in East
Germany or even Eastern Europe versus -- or even Western
Europe with incinerators that were running for many years,
medical waste incinerators, waste energy -- trash incinerators
with no emission control technologies. That certainly isn't the
case here. So to compare these facilities with those older
facilities is just -- just not fair and disingenuous.
DR. CONNETT: I would like to respond to that. First of all,
the question did say "over 30 years of operation," and the fact --
the simple fact is that over the 30 years of operation of municipal
waste incinerators, these facilities have put a very large amount
of dioxin, a much higher percentage than any other type of
facility in the United States. There have been a number of health
studies. There is an increase in cancer near municipal waste
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incinerators in the U.K. Jack is correct. Many of these studies
are old facilities, but you got to remember to do an
epidemiological study by definition they are old facilities
because you can't do an instant epidemiological study. However,
increasing cancer in the U.K. Near incinerators -. a recent study
published in France -- excuse me -- published in America but it
was by French scientists who showed an increase in cancers
which can be related specifically to dioxin.
In -- previously in France they had a study which showed an
increase in respiratory problems which decreased as the further
you went away from the incinerator. In terms of impact on the
environment, in 1989 cows' milk downwind of a large incinerator
in Holland had three times the level of dioxins than cows' milk
anywhere else in Holland. They didn't shut the incinerator down.
Instead they told 16 dairy farmers that they couldn't sell their
milk. The government took that milk, extracted the fat, and the
fat was destroyed in a hazardous waste incinerator which
ironically stood next to the trash incinerator and was run by the
same company. That was 1989.
In 1998, January of 1998, the French Government shut down
three incinerators, I believe, although I'm not certain, Jack, but I
do believe they were all old incinerators in Lille, France, and the
levels of dioxin there was 16 parts per trillion. To put this into
perspective, you cannot sell milk in France or Germany above
five parts per trillion, which, incidentally, means you cannot sell
human breast milk even if you wanted to on the open market.
I -- I think the other interesting thing which bears underlining
is Ireland has the lowest levels of dioxin in Europe and possibly
in the world. It averages .23 parts per trillion. That's something
like four times lower than the German goal. The German goal is
to get cows' milk level down to less than .9 points per trillion.
The difference between Ireland and the U.K. which averages ten
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times higher than Ireland, one of the big differences is that
Ireland has never run trash incinerators. So there's quite a bit of
evidence, if you look for it, that incinerators have impacted the
environment, have impacted the food chain, and have impacted
human health. But I agree -- I agree that the modern incinerators
with this enormous amount of money spent on them has reduced
these risks considerably.
MR. MUDD: Sir, you have the last question. I think I gave it
to you just a little while ago.
DR. CONNETT: Okay. "What do -- do or do you know the
most dangerous ]ob in America is?" I used to imagine being
president. No, seriously.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: County commissioner might be
up there.
DR. CONNETT: Yeah, but the most dangerous ]ob -- someone
said tax collector behind me.
MR. MUDD: Sir, I think-- I think we're --
DR. CONNETT: I am stumped. I mean, I think mining. I
think uranium mining must be right up there.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Steeple jack.
DR. CONNETT: Steeple jack, yeah.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: Probably the lumber industry.
MR. MUDD: We -- Commissioners, do you have any questions
directly? They've answered all the ones from the audience.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I have one.
MR. MUDD: Yes, ma'am.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I wanted to ask Dr. Stokes a
question because my -- you started out your remarks by saying,
"Whatever you do," if I understood you correctly, "don't sort of
jigsaw puzzle a solution to your waste problem. Get one big
solution if you possibly can." And if I understood that right, it
troubles me because it sounds to me like certainly composting is
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a part of the solution, certainly recycling is part of the solution,
hopefully, reuse and some of these creative ideas for how to
reuse -- reuse what would otherwise be garbage is a part of the
solution. And I have such a respect for your opinion, I wanted to
know if I heard that right and if I did if you could make me
understand why several puzzle pieces is not the best answer to
the problem.
DR. STOKES: Well, you heard it right, but did not understand
it right.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Good.
DR. STOKES: Recycling is a piece, and we already have it.
We could keep it or let it go. I note a problem with that, but what
I'm saying is when you take the next bite you want to take a big
bite. For example, I didn't go into this, but I was a representative
for many years with the Bedminster Composting Company as
their consultant and sales representative. I gave it up because I
was so unimpressed with their performance in building plants.
And I particularly followed the Cobb County plant all through --
I've been in every one of their plants, and I have a son that's
trying to build a plant in Gettysburg. He's a county commissioner
too,
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: God bless him.
DR. STOKES: He's weak-minded, see. Now, it would be
possible to build here this county a 800-ton-a-day composting
plant, and that would give you essentially a total solution
because on the front end you would take some things out and
recycle them, and the compost would go to ag people, and as
this charming lady says, we really need the compost.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Yes.
DR. STOKES: This is an ideal place to make it. And so that
would be a big piece, and that's what I want you to do is take a
big bite, not a whole lot of little ones.
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COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay. I appreciate that. Thank
you.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Could I -- could I just add to that
just a little bit. I heard a presentation yesterday which -- but it
had little pieces, and I thought it was very, very interesting
because they dealt with major problems such as composting and
the C&D material and grease and waste-to-energy. I mean, they
had many different components, each one in itself would, I
guess, be self-sustaining as well. And I -- I just thought it was a
rather good idea, and so I don't think we should rule anything
out.
DR. STOKES: It is a good idea until you start trying to put
them together as enterprise businesses and manage them and
have them not lose money and not fail to work right. In theory
it's an awfully good idea. The problem is in the details, and our
solid waste department is probably busy already, and if you start
laying more and more enterprises on them to run efficiently and
to not lose money, it's kind of hard.
DR. CONNETT: Can I -- I think that the key thing here is, if
you ask the question what to do with waste. If you make that
first mistake of mixing everything, there is no magic machine. I
mean, there are a lot of people selling us magic machines, but in
my view there is no magic machine. If you separate, then you
can be rational. You -- you -- you should ask questions like, what
do we do with the paper? What do with do with the cardboard?
What do we do with tires? What do we do with this? What do we
do with that? It seems to me that those are all rational
questions, and if you can -- I disagree, I think, with Dr. -- Mr.
Stokes here because I think it is the art of cobbling together the
small enterprises that can make businesses and handle
individual materials where they've got good quality control on
them.
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I mean, for example, you refer to the Bedminster
operation. One of the things that always concerned me about
the Bedminster facility is that they insisted that they could take
raw waste. They said, "Don't bother the citizens. Send us your
trash in plastic bags. We will shred it and compost it." To me
that compost is never going to be usable. So just getting that
right to make sure that you source separate the organics and
then use elegant composting operations and then, yes, if a
company can take waste oil, vegetable oil, and convert it to bio-
diesel, that's a great little operation. And, yes, you may have to
take a little bit of a gamble. Some of these companies might --
might go under. Some of them won't, but the alternative of
putting all your eggs into the waste corporation's basket to me is
-- would be a fatal mistake. However, the big problem is it means
work for you guys. It's work for you guys. If someone comes
along tomorrow and says, "We've got the machine for you. We'll
build it over here. You just send us the trash at $70 a ton or
whatever" is very tempting. There's no work for you. You might
get a lot of criticism, but it's no work.
Whereas what I'm talking about is a lot of work. You've got
to deploy your staff like George here and others into running
down these. What do you do with this material? What do you do
with that material? Where can we get a business to do this? This
is a lot of work. It isn't easy.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Excuse me. Thank you, sir, and Dr.
Hampton, you had a comment.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: I just wanted to add many people
mentioned a bed municipal bio conversion. I worked for them for
many years. They have a plant in Tennessee and another in
Atlanta, and they have the problem that most compost facilities
have the problem, which is they concentrate in waste disposal,
and they don't produce a product.
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June 11, 2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Right.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: So they don't have a product to
sell, therefore, they fail so --
DR. STOKES: You're a hundred percent correct.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: Yeah -- thank you. If you
concentrate on what your customers need and you create a
product, then you will sell it.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: To pursue that just a moment, whether
you use composting at the end, whether you use energy
conversion at the end, if you have what I'm going to refer to as
what I understand a Murf (phonetic) operation up front, does all
the separation of materials, addresses what Dr. Connett is saying
that you have -- you have potential industries that can use that
material. You have a way to get that out of the mainstream
including, I would say, electronic waste which I think is a big
issue, and then you have ways to deal with this. So it would
seem, if I'm tracking this conversation, that if at the end you
have done a good ]ob of separating out, then it becomes a
question of what do you do.
MR. RISTAU: Just be advised that you're into the commodity
of market when you're breaking out materials, and commodity of
markets go, as we all know, up and they can go down. You --
also in the issue of selling the commodity means you have to --
you have to produce a product of this specific specification for
somebody to use it. And the second, the other element, you have
to produce it in quantities and third -- fourth, probably at this
point, you have to be close to your location or users of it. If there
is transportation costs, those costs have to be factored in. So
you're running into all those issues that have to be balanced as
Doctor -- I believe, Dr. Stokes said. Balancing all those at any
different point at any time is that a system that you want to build
a county's solid waste plant on versus something that it's a little
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more manageable and you're dealing with more proven
technologies or more proven companies that have a track record
and maybe even in dealing in commodities, but a proven track
record.
DR. STOKES: Now, the best place to see a pilot operation of
composting is Sumter County. I have been working with Terry
Hurst up there for years. I was up at his plant the other day
sweating with him on how to get glass out of the compost so we
could have a product to sell. If he can get the glass out, he can
sell every pound of it. There's enough golf courses in Collier
County alone to take all the compost you could make from 800
tons a day.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Absolutely.
DR. STOKES: And that doesn't count the onion growers and
the petunias and everything else. So you can see this up at
Sumter County a microcosm of it. Go take a look at it.
MR. RISTAU: With that product, you, the producer has to
warranty the product and is subject to liability. DR. STOKES: It has to be approved.
MR. RISTAU: If you're the producer, you have to stand
behind your product, pluses and minuses.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: It can be done.
DR. CONNETT: Could I answer this question, too, because I
think in terms of could we guarantee today that a hundred
percent of everything that was separated would have an instant
market, the answer is no. Communities cannot recycle
everything. There's a lot of junk coming at us which is bad
industrial design. That's the long-term -- the long term. The 21st
century, 20 years from now to address that, but I urge you to look
at Halifax, Nova Scotia, where in six years they're getting 65
percent of this diverted, created a lot of small businesses in the
process, and 3,000 jobs. So I'm -- I'm going to go there shortly
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with a video camera, so we'll see who gets there first.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I'm sorry. Commissioner Coletta, you
also had a question.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I appreciate it. I wasn't
volunteering to go to Nova Scotia, even though I think some
people would like me to, but if I may take us in a little different
direction. I would like to talk to you about waste-to-energy, and
I've been doing quite a bit of my own research on that, and I don't
claim to be the experts that you gentlemen are. But there's a
couple of issues that I'm concerned about. One, would our waste
stream produce enough that we could have a waste-to-energy
plant that would be self-sustaining and have a break-even point?
Number two, I know that you -- you have a cost for transmission.
That's unbelievable for the small amount -- small producer and I
heard about us becoming an authority and everything, but I also
understand that the government subsidy for this sunsets in about
a year and a half. How's this going to affect the whole picture as
far as waste-to-energy goes?
MR. RISTAU: First of all, on the first question regarding
quantity, just looking at the county data, 25 percent and 21
percent -- 25 percent of the total 160,000 tons is C&D waste.
Twenty-one percent is yard trimmings. So if those two materials
were processed or composted, you'd be already up to 46 percent
of your total waste stream being dealt with, and the balance
there certainly would still be room, I would think, for some paper
recycling and some metals and possibly some plastics, and the
rest could be combusted.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: And would that be enough to
sustain a plant?
MR. RISTAU: Yes. If you could look at that, you're probably
down into about 500 to 600 tons per day remaining waste stream
after recycling, and that's after very aggressive recycling after
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you take out the C&D and yard -- COMMISSIONER COLETTA: How would we be affected when
the government sunsets subsidy?
MR. RISTAU: I'm not sure I understand.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I understand that there's a
subsidy for producing electricity by this.
MR. RISTAU: What we're all going to be witnessing here in --
in -- in stages that go to deregulation you're going to be in a
position of selling power to the grid at whatever the power price
is, so the plant will always be in a position to sell power. The
question is at what price will it be selling at any given time.
You'll see it and we've been tracking the data here in Florida in
the southeast. Unfortunately, you will see the increasing of
electricity prices here in the Southeast, not to the degree you're
seeing in California.
DR. STOKES: What roughly is it now?
MR. RISTAU: Well, voided cost right now is selling
electricity to the grid at three and a half cents -- 3 cents, 3.1
cents, and it will rise over the next 10, 15 years depending on
how deregulation occurs here. The comment I heard about
selling electricity, the real advantage that you may have in this
state when it goes to deregulation is going to hold the power to
yourself, offset your retail. For example, the county's paying a
big electric bill here, street lighting, any of your public buildings.
You pay public retail buildings, not three cents, but probably
seven or eight cents. Under deregulated market in certain cases
you would be able to make power from your own plant and offset
seven or eight cents for electricity prices, meaning a tremendous
amount of savings by generating your own power and selling it to
yourself so you wouldn't be out there selling at the lowest rate.
You'd be offsetting -- offsetting your retail price.
COMMISSIONER COI. ETTA: You still haven't answered the
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question about the break-even point. Is there a break-even
point?
MR. RISTAU: I'm not sure I understood the question.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: In other words, the cost to -- to
go to setting up a generator transmission lines and the whole
business, that cost there in addition to the incineration -- MR. RISTAU: I got your question.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: -- that produces the heat, where
would the cost break-even point? Is it there? Is it reasonably
there?
MR. RISTAU: There's two revenue sources to waste-to-
energy; that is electricity and disposal fees. Electricity prices
will never pay for the cost of capital and operations. So when
you add up that, you put the equation costs and revenues you
slide -- you take your costs you minus your electric revenues and
whatever that's left over is your disposal fee. So --
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: I understand your answer to
that, but I haven't got an answer to my question.
My question is, would it cost to put in a generator to put in the
transmission lines? The income that you get just from the
electricity, how long before it would pay that -- the facility itself,
that part of the facility, the generator part of the facility? Is
there a break-even point or not a break-even point?
MR. RISTAU: I don't think you have the option to build an
incinerator or a waste-to-energy plant. The waste-to-energy
plant is designed to be a -- to control the emissions as well as
produce electricity. I don't -- you don't have the option of
building just an incinerator. That's why there aren't any
incinerators in the United States, because if you had just an
incinerator, the cost of the air emission control devices are
prohibitive. In fact, that's why the incinerator -- to a large degree
a lot of these old incinerators of the '50s shut down because
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when emission requirements were upgraded those incinerators
couldn't do that.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: So you're saying that there is a
cost-relation benefit. So you just don't know how many years it
would be.
MR. RISTAU: There is a real benefit to having waste-to-
energy because -- see if I can make this clear. When the --
because you're cooling the gases, because you're taking the heat
out of the gases, you reduce the volume of air that has to be
cleaned, and that makes it more economical to build a waste-to-
energy plant than an -- than an incinerator. So if you had 500 tons
a day, whatever it is, you want to incinerate or do a waste-to-
energy plant, it would always be cheaper to build a waste-to-
energy plant.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Commissioner Carter, if it will
be at all possible since this particular subject is before us, we
have in the audience a gentleman that is an expert on this
particular subject, Jack Pointer. I was wondering if we might call
him up as the first speaker.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: He has the right to be here.
Is he on the speaking file tonight? He is a person who had FPL
do an analysis on our energy for the State of Florida for the next
20 years. That report will be put in the public record tomorrow at
the board meeting. Whether or not he -- if Mr. Pointer is still here
and he would choose to speak for five minutes, if he wants to try
to address that, we would incorporate that into the public
comments.
MR. OLLIFF: Mr. Chairman, I'm going to make a
recommendation here. It's almost 9:00 and you do have 15
registered speakers. If you want to go ahead to the speakers
and get Mr. Pointer up there first to answer maybe that one
particular question and then head straight to your public
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speakers, that would probably be a good way to move this
meeting along.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you, sir.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Jack Pointer is here, and he is
willing to speak.
DR. CONNETT: Could I add just a point of discussion while
Jack is walking up here. I think one of the important things in --
in making a decision like this is to be wary of the analysis which
says, "Recycling would take this much, composting would take
this much, there's this stuff left over, and that's the percentage
that we got to build an incinerator."
That's an integration, if you look, in space. I think more
inportantly is what you should say to the Commissioners with all
due respect is, "What should we do first?" And I think the
common sense says you got plenty of places that are looking for
your waste right now, lots of places. There are incinerators in
Broward County that are way short of trash. You've got five
years, at least five years to get everything that everybody agrees
with, recycling and composting, reuse, repair, all those nice
things to get those up to the -- the most, the best in the area, if
you like, and then when you've done that look at what's left over
and then revisit the incinerator. If you go with the incinerator
first, you tie up this capital for 25, 30 years.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Dr. Connett, we haven't made up
our minds. I think we owe it to our constituents out there to
have all the answers to all the questions, and that's what why I
wanted Mr. Pointer to emphasize on this one point.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: In the essence of everybody's time
this evening, Mr. Pointer, would you answer that question,
please.
MR. POINTER: Dr. Carter, thank you very much.
My name's Jack Pointer. I live in North Naples, and I have just
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been doing a little bit of work on an incinerator and the
incinerator-to-energy situation. I'll give you a figure of $150
million to build a incinerator. That particular incinerator will take
care of the waste that is in this particular county. The amount of
waste that is in this particular county is capable of generating
about 40 megawatts of electricity, so to the 150 million you
would have to add about a million and a half per megawatt to
install or $60 million, so a total of a incinerator plus the waste-to-
energy generating plant would be another 60 million. About $210
million would get you on the line, and that would keep you going
as far as burning the amount of -- of waste and generating
electricity.
Of the 40 megawatts of electricity that you would generate,
4 megawatts would be necessary to run the plant. So you would
have about 36 megawatts left that can be sold on the market.
The amount of money that it's going to take that $60 million to
put up the electric generating station is going to have to take an
operating cost per year with the people, with the maintenance,
with everything that's involved in there, you've got to take a
figure somewhere in the range of 20 percent of that or about 12 --
or about $24 million per year is going to be the fixed charges of
owning that plus operating it. Somebody had to give $60 million
one way or the other.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: And that's -- that comes to the
issue that Dr. Connett was saying about, you know, set aside for
a moment the environmental issues and evaluate this
economically, and it's an absurd concept for our county. It's an
absurd --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: If may be popular at this moment, but I
would want to see a complete economic analysis before I would
make any decision on anything, and I appreciate Mr. Pointer's
input tonight. I think it's very valuable, but I am not -- this
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June 11, 2001
commissioner is not going to look at bits and pieces. I am going
to look at a big picture. I value every person who has been here
tonight and spoken, and I'm going to kind of wind this up. But,
Dr. Connett, if there's any way that you feel that I have treated
you unfairly tonight, I would apologize, sir.
DR. CONNETT: No, I -- I --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Because I respect you,
and I do enjoy debating with you, and I would like to do that in
some other forum probably just one on one. I enjoy that and
everyone that's been here that's debated. I know Dr. Jones and
you have debated. Sometimes maybe folks don't really
understand that when we kind of go at each other on this stuff
it's not personal. It is that we have some criteria we're trying to
get established.
CHAIRMAN FIALA: Jack, are you finished? Oh, I'm so sorry.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: So I'm just saying I thank all of you.
And, Jack, is there anything else you want to add?
MR. POINTER: I just want to add on that in a year there is
just short 9,000 hours in each year or 8,760 hours in a year, and
so each megawatt is capable of giving you about 9,000 megawatt
hours per year. A figure somewhere in the range of around $30 a
megawatt hour is about right that you can get from the market
today. We're going to find in the State of Florida, that is, in the
southern part of Florida, that the Florida Power and Light has
adequate supplies of energy for now and for the next 10 or 15
years, very much so. They are not going to pay a premium for
electricity. They'll pay what it cost them probably in the range of
$30. So this is a long and deep and thoughtful thing that has to
be done, but all of those numbers that I just began to give you
have to be thought through and have to be a fact, not just off the
top of my head.
Dr. Carter, thank you very much, sir.
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CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Chairman, this concludes the panel
discussion. Okay. And at this juncture I'd like to thank the
panelists for coming here tonight and being part of this -- being
part of this educational process for the public and for the
Commission. Your time is very valuable, and I understand that,
and I think it's appreciated by everybody in this room, and I
would like to thank you very much, and if you could please loin
me with a round of applause. (Applause.)
MR. MUDD: Mr. Chairman, about public comments, that
normally goes back to the Chairman of the Board of County
Commissioners. We have 13 speakers. The first is Mildred
Haylock or Haylode (phonetic). Is she -- is she here?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: And as we do this, Mr. Mudd, I would
like to take all our public comment, but I think each one needs to
make the statements, we appreciate that, put it on the public
record but not engage in debate with any one of the panelists or
the commissioners at this point. Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Is Mildred here? The next -- the next speaker is
Gary Burrows -- Burris, excuse me.
MR. BURRIS: Over here. Which side do you want?
MR. OLLIFF: Jim, if you'll go ahead and call them out two at
a time, we can get the next person ready.
MR. BURRIS: I'm Gary Burris, and I'm with the Green Model
Project. My ]ob for a long time is to put the pieces of the puzzle
together to make your ]ob as commissioners easy so you can
take care of the needs of these people.
In this room are companies willing to bring you
30 to 40 megawatts of energy, to take all your waste and turn it
into usable compost that's clean that's being used all over the
world, to take your wood waste and gasify that in a nontoxic
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process elimination.
Just forget the dioxin debate. That's wagging the wheel
crap. We're talking about the space shuttle here. And it will cost
you not one thin dime. These people are ready to pay you for the
rights to capture that gas from the landfill and use it, so why
even consider this technology when the space shuttle -- when
technology that can basically -- I don't think it will save the
world, but it's a step in the right direction, and the coming out of
a Republican White House this is remarkable and it was probably
what Mr. Bush didn't want to here. But they finally are saying
that we've got a global warming problem, that in the last 15
years, 10 of the hottest years on record have already passed, and
it's getting hotter and hotter. And they say here, this is quite
clear, the primary source of fossil fuel burning and has released
roughly as much carbon dioxide as would be required to account
for the observed increase in the temperature.
What that says to me -- after over 20 years as an activist
that I've done many Ph.D. type studies with my work. I've made
a lot of films. To make a film correctly you've got to get into the
data. What that says is the heating is going to double, the global
-- the melt down of the poles is going to at least double, it's going
to increase in velocity of how it's happening to us, and it's real.
And we stand a chance if we release any more carbon dioxide
unnecessarily of eradicating all mammal life on this planet and --
and this is not some idle statement from somebody that hasn't
been there who hasn't seen the data, who hasn't studied it. I've
interviewed the top scientists in the world, and it's troubling in
that there are people I can see, like I say, sitting over there who
are willing to come here, and I think it was in the paper today I
made a challenge.
Why don't you build a little incinerator on one side of the
landfill; let us build our project over here. Let's both hire the
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best scientist to check emissions, and then let's swap scientists,
to keep us honest, and then at the end of the year he who has
depleted the environment get the hell out, and let the people who
are here to genuinely try to clean up this planet, and the people
in this room I feel are -- are -- environmentally conscious to the
extreme. Why would you put your life in developing technology
that's better for mankind if you didn't somewhere down inside
believe you're doing the right thing. And there's a lot more
companies out there. I made it my life's work for the last few
years to -- to go out, find out who they are, look at their
technology, check their data, check it with scientists, check it
with the EPA.
And the people in this room tonight represent something
that this county would be very, very proud of, and your soil
conditions would improve. You would have energy and when the
big hurricane comes and sweating with the mosquitoes, you can
put the light on. And it's a very good idea for this county to
become a municipal authority and have your own energy source,
and I would at this point -- moment petition the county to take
back management of the landfill. Let's put it on an even playing
field and deprivatize it, so we don't have to put up with this one-
minded crap with one ma]or company out here trying to keep -- to
get their stock market price back up. Thank you very much.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Wimer withdrew. Next to the podium is
Edith Williams followed by Mark Olson.
MS. WILLIAMS: I was in this room 15 years ago when we
were considering the same thing. Well, we were really almost
signed up. In fact, I think we were partly signed for the resource
recovery plant. We defeated it.
I've had 15 years of clean air to breathe and, let's see, I
think it was Dr. Jones said, an old plant -- and he mentioned an
old plant as being 15 years old. Well, that's what we would have
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had, a 15-year-old plant here. And, furthermore, when we were
trying to defeat it, the men were here, and they were in the
process of putting in the Palm Beach one, and so I -- they here --
they were proposing, our Commissioners at that time, were
proposing that this was the latest thing there was, and I knew it
wasn't because I knew what Palm Beach was putting in. I knew
what we were going to get. So I asked the men who were here
that were going to build the plant over there or were in the
process of building it, they said what we were going to get was
not as up to date as was Palm Beach. We wouldn't have had
what Palm Beach had. We would have had dirtier air.
I think it was just wonderful -- just wonderful to me to hear Dr.
Connett and Dr. Hampton a whole new way of going. Just
wonderful. You could run with it, and I'm all for that, and the
county must have feelings that way too, the county
commissioners, because about a year or so ago they gave us all
a great big bin that we could compost in. Gave it to us. All this
how to build it and everything.
Well, anyway, I'm opposed to this. It's extremely expensive
comparatively. Emissions pollute the air, and the ash is
unacceptable, and I would like to go the other way.
MR. MUDD: Mark Olson followed by Mr. Bob Krasowski.
MR. OLSON: Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the
board. My name is Mark Olson. I reside at 1019 Broad Avenue
North in the City of Naples. For eight years I served as chief
operating officer and member of the board of directors for Micro
Lite USA, Inc. Micro Lite provided consulting services and
turnkey solutions within the following areas: Municipal solid
waste material recovery facilities, recycling programs public and
private, waste composition studies, ground water contamination
abatement and treatment systems, compost facility design and
operation, post consumer commodity marketing and distribution,
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June 11, 2001
direct permit and regulatory negotiations, economic modeling
and cost benefit analysis, direct budgeting, financing, staffing,
training, and implementation, contract negotiations public and
private, competitive analysis of MSW disposal methods, landfill
versus incineration versus recovery and composting.
I've attended over 300 public meetings concerning
design, site selection, permitting of solid waste facility. I'm a
former local elected planning board member in Massachusetts.
My most notable achievement while working for Micro Lite was
designing and implementing and operating a portable 300-ton-
per-day material recovery facility in Atlanta, Georgia, and a
200,000 square foot compost site in Conyers, Georgia. The
facility was contracted by the 1996 Atlanta committee for the
Olympic Games, AGCOG, and received all mixed waste from the
sporting venues for recycling and composting. Official numbers
published by AGCOG showed an 82 percent diversion rate from
landfill, an Olympic first.
I believe it's reasonable to state I have some knowledge of
solid waste issues. Collier County is not the first nor the last to
face waste disposal issues. The irony is many of the steps taken
and that this commission will take have been taken by other
communities and often with disastrous result. I'm reminded of
an example in Dakota County where a five-member county
commission -- this is Dakota County, Minnesota, by the way --
five-member county commission voted three to two to design and
construct an incinerator. The decision prompted uproar within
the community. Over two years a three-to-two majority spent
$50 million designing and permitting the facility. Within that two-
year time frame, two fresh candidates for the county commission
ran on a "stop the incinerator" platform, were elected on that
single issue. As a consequence the project was scrapped, and
the only thing to go up in smoke was 50 million taxpayer dollars.
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Based on my expert opinion, however, and speaking as a
taxpayer, I can't help but assume that the decision has already
been made in Collier County, at least somewhat to go ahead with
an incinerator. I support this assumption with the fact that
Malcolm Pirnie has a reputation in my industry for promoting
incineration as a primary source of disposal. I don't think that's
an objective review. In dollars and cents actually the public
wants to know one thing. What's it going to cost? In dollars and
cents it's reasonable to conclude that -- that eighty-five to
hundred dollar tip fees would accompany a waste-to-energy
plant. They could go higher. It depends. I asked the question on
whether or not the guarantee could be made that it wouldn't go
beyond annual increases above the CPI. I think my answer was,
"Well, I can't guarantee that."
Recently I've taken it upon myself to find a better deal for
Collier County. Using my contacts in the solid waste industry, I
know at least one firm that's willing to come to Collier County
and enter into serious negotiations to build a 2,000-ton-per-day
material recovery compost facility. All costs for this facility
would be privately funded. That means not a penny coming from
the taxpayers. However, like any operation and relationship
there are, of course, two requirements that would have to come
from the county. The first is they would have to sign a minimum
ten-year contract to send all the waste in the county to this
facility. The second requirement on the county would be that
they would have to provide some location, and this could be
arranged through say a 99-year lease for $1 a year. And there's
all sorts of creative ways of doing that.
For these two commitments, this is what the benefit is: 100
to 150 jobs in the county with a liveable wage and a health
benefit, recycling and composting consumer marketing of over
80 percent, a 30-plus year solution to the county's waste
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disposal issue, virtually no adverse environmental impact, tip fee
of $59 plus or minus per ton not to increase annually by inflation.
As a taxpayer and resident of Collier County, I encourage this
commission to take this offer seriously or any other which meets
this criteria, because I certainly believe this approach is
environmentally friendly, common sense, and is the only way that
we can truly be in charge of our future relative to solid waste
issues. Thank you.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you. Next speaker, please.
MR. MUDD: Bob Krasowski followed by Ben Krasowski.
MR. BOB KRASOWSKI: Good evening and hello
commissioners, hello public. I found tonight's meeting very
interesting. A lot of information passed about, but I can't help
but notice how we have three representatives, paid
representatives activity for the waste industry here to the one Dr.
Connett.
Several months ago when I petitioned the county to have
another workshop after they had their workshop on the top of the
landfill in December of 2000, after a couple of occassions asked
them to do this, to do this, they said they would. And initially
there was the understanding that it would be Dr. Connett here to
balance the bias, the bias that Malcolm Pirnie had presented in
their various expensive $400,000 worth of reports they provided
to the county but -- and it was understood that Malcolm Pirnie
would have a chemist here to balance out a discussion, make a
rational discussion with Dr. Connett.
But as you see here tonight, the primary representation here
are these three gentlemen, one on pyrolysis of fluidized bed, Dr.
Stokes, who I might add according to what Ms. Edith Williams
said earlier was the gentleman who was initially the person
promoting incineration in 1985. He stated earlier that he doesn't
have a dog in this fight or he doesn't have an interest, but Dr.
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Stokes hand carried the incineration proposal from Foster
Wheeler and delivered it to the county for consideration. As I
understand, Foster Wheeler did not do that themselves. Dr.
Stokes is also promoting pyrolysis, another one of the six
finalists in the narrowed-down field by Malcolm Pirnie. These
other two gentlemen I understand from previously talking to Dr.
Connett were in Guam when he was discussing incineration and
waste alternative. I don't know why we should call incineration
the alternative and these other methods as the primary -- for
primary consideration.
We sit here tonight looking for a solution to our landfill
problem, and what we actually have here is a wasted time by
dealing with these waste-to-energy people. There's a group of
men over here that represent various interests that was
mentioned by Mr. Burris, and I'm not endorsing anyone, but
maybe tonight I'll lean towards that because I've had the benefit
of listening to their presentation, and I've had the benefit of
hearing Dr. Connett's questions of them in regards to the impact
of their various methods. We should get these men up here and
get rid of these incinerator guys. $200 million and $150 million is
obscene. Okay. To bring these gentlemen who will just take
your tipping fee and work on the problem is where we should be
going.
Now, you know, as a child I was given a good lesson. I was
told that if anyone were ever to catch -- capture a Leprechaun
you could force the Leprechaun to tell you where it's gold was,
and there was a gentleman who actually captured a Leprechaun,
and then the Leprechaun had to agree to tell him where he got
the gold. Leprechauns steal a lot of gold. You can get out of
people's pockets, off of the desks, and stuff like that, and they
accumulate pots of it. So they -- the Leprechaun had to
surrender the location of the gold. This gentleman took his scarf
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off, wrapped it around a tree, and then made the Leprechaun
promise not to remove the scarf while he went to get a shovel.
Well, the guy went to get a shovel to dig up the gold, and when
he got back to the forest there were scarves -- there was a scarf
around every tree. So he couldn't locate it.
That's what happened here tonight. You've got Dr. Connett
here to balance the bias. He could speak for an hour on himself
or beyond that on these various issues and be very informative to
our population. Instead the situation was created where you
have Dr. Connett, 15 minutes, 45 minutes. Fifteen-minute
presentation, three guys pro incineration for forty-five minutes.
How many questions? We have a question and answer. He gets
a pile of questions. They get three piles of questions, and they're
all proposing the same thing. This is outrageous. This is the
beginning, I hope, and not the end.
Commissioners, I think you asked some excellent questions
though most of you, obviously, some commissioners are still
promoting and pushing along with Dr. Stokes incineration, and I
could go into detail about that at a later time. But any of you
that want to hear more about this issue from Dr. Connett are
invited to the Golden Gate Community Center tomorrow night
where at 7:07 right after Jazzercise Dr. Connett will give a
complete presentation not under the -- hassle of timeliness and
then also not under the debate with these incinerator guys. And
if you guys want to come, too, that's fine, but the floor will be
occupied by Dr. Connett.
There's is much more I could say. I've got the minute signal
from -- from Mr. Mudd, and I just hope, Commissioners, that this --
this is the beginning. We've listened to other people, other
options. It's absurd what's going on here.
COMMISSIONER COLETTA: Bob -- Bob, before you go
anyplace, I think you need to say one other thing. Has this
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process been open to you fully and openly where you were made
-- you were made privy to every piece of information that came
down? We seeked (sic) your advise continuously. We haven't
shut out one inch of the way. Mention that now, Bob. Give us a
little credit, Bob. We bent way over backwards to make sure this
was totally fair.
MR. BOB KRASOWSKI: Commissioner Coletta, I think it's
inappropriate for you to -- to bring this up. I have not attacked
you. I've complimented you on the questions.
I have involved myself as a citizen, no cost to the county. I
am not reimbursed for this stuff. I've worked over a long period
of time. Now, I'm not isolating myself as being unusual in this
regard. I know you, before you became a commissioner, did
much of this yourself. Everybody sitting here has contributed
time. But what I'm saying is that myself, people like Dr. Connett,
are not paid by anyone to do this stuff.
I'd like to know who arranged for these three gentlemen,
probably -- how many of you were brought here by Malcolm
Pirnie? Okay. And yourself, sir, you're on your own waste-to-
energy. And, Dr. Stokes, are you paid anything for this at all? I
know you live here.
DR. STOKES: I hope to get a cup of coffee from Jim Parnell.
MR. BOB KRASOWSKI: And last time you didn't get paid
anything, but you got $11,000 in expenses, wasn't that the case,
in '85?
DR. STOKES: What's that?
MR. KRASOWSKI: In 1985--well, I'm beyond my time.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Irrelevant.
MR. MUDD: Ben, you have the podium next followed by Jan
Krasowski.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Could I -- could I just ask the
county manager, would it be possible to get a videotape of that
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presentation tomorrow evening that we could replay on Channel
54?
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You could probably get taped
presentation to be WGF Frank Kidman tomorrow morning at 7:30
a.m. And I believe 5:30 with Mr. Rich King on WINK WNOJ, as I
understand it. So I think it's great.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I would very much like to have
the Golden Gate event recorded and replayed on Channel 54.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I think that's one side.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: One side of information would be
good for people to have.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: No, you need a balance,
Commissioner, as we need in all of it, and that's what we're
trying to do.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: But couldn't we --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: This is played tonight; right?
This is recorded tonight?
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Sure. We're live but also if we
could record that, if you want to run a thing underneath it that
says this is one side of the equation and other people's opinions
differ from this gentleman's and the county doesn't endorse this
position but, you know, let people be educated.
MS. WILLIAMS: I think so because --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Excuse me. We've got a number of
speakers.
(Multiple speakers from the audience.)
MS. WILLIAMS: He had -- he had -- they got three lawyers
against one. That's what we got here.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Was there -- could we possibly --
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I think we'll reserve that for discussion
at the board meeting tomorrow morning, Commissioner. It's
getting late.
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June 11,2001
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Okay.
MR. MUDD: Ben, how you doing?
MR. BEN KRASOWSKI: I'm doing good. Hello
Commissioners and Members of the Committee. I'm Ben
Krasowski as you might have heard. I am up here right now
because I've heard that the commissioners are considering --
well, not just commissioners, the people -- just basically Collier
County has been considering building an incinerator, and it's
come up that the commissioners, some of the commissioners
were considering using a 50-year plan for the paying of the
incinerator, the planning, and no alterations, and so on.
I think that's ridiculous 'cause I'm 14 now, and
by the time I will be old enough to use my plans and use my
ideas, I'll be 64, and no offense, you guys will be long gone.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Never know.
MR. BEN KRASOWSKI: Anyways, this just leaves me to be
paying for this incinerator all through my life until I'm 64. And
also leaves me -- you all know I'm pretty smart, so all my ideas to
go to waste so until I'm 64, of course. So I'll leave you with that
and thank you.
MR. MUDD: The next speaker is Jan Krasowski followed by
John Villella.
MS. KRASOWSKI: Good evening. Thank you for -- as well for
having a solid waste workshop, but I too was very disappointed
to find that your workshop panel to be stacked to give waste-to-
energy a majority of the voice here this evening. The incinerator
industry doesn't get it. Your well-paid, short-sighted consultant
Malcolm Pirnie doesn't get it. You're all fiscally conservative
Republican elected officials, I hope you can get it.
A 30 to 50 years solid waste plan is not fiscally or socially
responsible. First of all, solid waste is not a renewable resource.
If we continue to treat what we throw away as something to
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stick in a landfill or burn instead of something to be recycled or
reused and given back for future generations to use again, we're
missing the whole point. And this is especially for you,
Commissioner Coletta, we don't want to selfishly deplete our
earth's resources by feeding a waste-to-energy plant that
depends upon our disposing of our resources to operate. The
closest, earliest option is the only responsible method that is
fiscally and socially responsible.
I just have a few other comments here. That was my main
thing. An incinerator can only be sighted as a power plant. It
can't be sighted as an incinerator in the State of Florida. An
incinerator, it's expensive. I mean, homeowners cannot afford an
increase in trash collection fees. And this is a concern of the
tens of thousands of households -- and I've got to turn my notes
over -- who are already strained to the limit just meeting day-to-
day living expenses especially when our trash collection bills are
added to our property tax bills and you can take our property if
we don't pay our property taxes.
There are other -- there are other contaminants produced
during trash incineration besides dioxin which are of even
greater concern and especially to our children. These are heavy
metals and most notably they are mercury and lead. You are
fiscally-conscious Republicans elected to watch our
expenditures, please get it. Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Out next speaker is John Villella ' followed by
Tracy Harris.
MR. VII. LELLA: My name is John Villella, manager of
business development for Detroit Edison subsidiary. That's the
7th largest utility--
MR. MUDD: Speak into the mike.
MR. VILLELLA: The situation in our business is developing
landfill gas-to-energy projects. When I first came in contact with
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Collier County, became aware of your problem, it was an odor
problem, and clearly what's happening here is a case of landfill
gas escaping from the landfill, and there's been, I think~ nine
extensions on trying to correct that problem. And our particular
position is we build large landfill gas projects. We have one
running in Orlando here. We're taking -- the project is designed
for 8 million cubic feet a day, and what we do is we take that gas
from the landfill, we send it to the Stanton Power Station.
It's a 900 megawatt utility plant in Orlando.
So two things are happening out of this. Number one, the
greenhouse gas is disappearing from the environment. Number
two, you've got less particulates and emissions going up into the
atmosphere, and bottom line is the EPA says this is the
equivalent of taking 187,000 cars out of the road, 187,000 off the
road. We do this all over the country. It's a situation where
we're not asking you for $210 million and $24 million in operating
expenses. We pay you. Okay? We pay royalties on gas
extraction rights all over the country. I've got 26 of these things
running, 3 in Florida. Okay?
And then the problem became more of a comprehensive
solution. So I began to think, well, supposing we could reduce
vehicle fuel emissions, diesel fuel emissions in this county, and I
began to say, well, we could connect a bio-diesel production
facility to the landfill, use the landfill gas-to-energy to run that.
And I went up recently to investigate how these things operate,
and you're talking about producing a million gallons a year of
alternate fuel under EPAC which is enough to treat on a 80/20
blend. Talking about treating five million gallons of diesel fuel.
In this particular county, we could run your school buses off of it.
We could run your diesel fleets off of it, and now we're into a
comprehensive solution.
And so what I decided -- we've decided to do is to put
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together a couple of companies who are cutting edge in these
types of things and see if we could mitigate some other
problems. Okay? Air quality problems, municipal solid waste
problems, and so essentially what I'm saying to you is that we
build these things on our dime. Okay? We're not asking you for
anything. All right? So it's an entirely different situation. So
right now you're flaring gas out there at the rate of 2.8 million
cubic feet a day on average. It's your tax dollars going up in the
air that can be put to use. So between the three of us here,
we're looking at 30 megawatts worth of power which can be
generated off of just what you're throwing away and mitigate or
do our -- make our best attempt at mitigating the odor problem
here which apparently has been going on for quite some time.
So how do we proceed at this point? I mean, what I think the
best thing to do is you want to know specifically -- I hear a
Commissioner here, he wants to have a complete economic
analysis. Put an RFP out on the street, and I'll give you to the
penny what the economic analysis will do, and these two other
guys over here will also, and they're making investments, so we
need an RFP, we'll show you exactly what we plan to do. You
can look at it. We'll answer questions. If you don't like it, you
don't have to take it. It's just that simple.
COMMISSIONER FIALA: Could you tell everybody what
company you were with?
MR. VILLELLA: Yes, I did.
MR. KRASOWSKI: We didn't hear you.
MR. MUDD: John Villella is from DTE Biomass Energy.
MR. VILLELLA: Yes. It's an affiliate of Detroit Edison. Okay.
We go into these projects on an all-cash basis. We just put the
money up. We don't -- we don't finance anything. We don't go
through any lender, due diligence. We just build it. That's all. No
brainer.
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June 11, 2001
MR. MUDD: The next speaker is Tracy Harris followed by Bill
Fowler.
MS. HARRIS: Hey guys. You're going to like me. I'm not
going to take the full five minutes. We are actually one of those
tiny little pieces of the puzzle that can add up to something really
big. It's -- we're -- we have a new system we just recently
brought to the area. It's a cooking oil management system for
restaurants. Right now they're dealing with a lot of extra waste
and trash with gibs of oil that are stored in plastic and then
boxes of cardboard wrapped around that.
We put in a system that brings it to them in bulk so it's two
tanks, one holds fresh oil, one holds waste oil. Right now their
waste oil is picked up, often spilled into the sewer system. I
understand there's been a little bit of a problem with that around
here. So this keeps happening -- happening because there isn't
anything that can be spilled. It's a completely closed loop
system, but it also, of course, adds to eliminating having all
those waste oil trucks going to pick up all the waste oil because
now they're coming to our plant. We have a full system in an
area -- we're looking at about 1.5 million pounds of waste oil
picked up from us per month. Imagine all the trucks running
around town going to all the restaurants picking that up, so we're
eliminating that happening. Plus we're eliminating about 700,000
cubic feet of waste no longer being dumped into the dumpsters.
Plus we're also eliminating the -- the sewer issues.
I grew up in San Diego County where we always had
problems with water shortages, so what's going on down here is
kind of nothing new for me. I take a short shower, by the way,
but --
COMMISSIONER HENNING: I take a group shower.
MS. HARRIS: There you go. Well, I just got back from St.
Johns. Down there all the showers hold four people, so I
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June 11, 2001
understand.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: You may have found your direction.
MS. HARRIS: But in San Diego one of the things they did
was they came up with a -- a little bit of a tax benefit for anybody
who put in the toilets that use less water. Maybe there's
something we can do as far as restaurants that look for ways --
solutions to or businesses look for solutions to lower waste.
Thank you very much.
(Unidentified speaker from the audience which
could not be heard.)
CHAIRMAN CARTER: We have to have everybody on a mike
that speaks, and we cannot have dialogue, Commissioner, with
anybody in the audience.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I would like to repeat that for the
record. The gentleman -- what was your name? Gary Burris said
she's here as a part of their proposal that her company would
gather the oil that then would be used to produce the bio-diesel.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Thank you.
MR. MUDD: The next speaker will be Bill Fowler followed by
Asfaha Tesfai. I hope I got it close.
MR. FOWLER: I will be quick despite the graphics that will
help me go faster.
COMMISSIONER HENNING: You have five minutes, sir.
MR. FOWLER: I will use it. Ready. Go. I represent Canada
Composting, Inc. Actually, I represent the U.S. Arm of Canada
Composting, Inc., which we call CCI. We have the largest
anaerobic digestion facility for the processing of municipal solid
waste in North America. See if this works. I don't know if this is
going to work or not.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Move closer to the mike.
MR. FOWLER: Somebody hit the light?
DR. CONNETT-' Use this microphone over here. Is that
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June 11, 2001
working?
MR. MUDD: George, hit the button, the forward button.
MR. FOWLER: Arrow to the right. Hit the arrow.
DR. OZORES-HAMPTON: You have to escape first.
MR. FOWLER: Get out of that one.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Tell you, we got a table full of PhDs
and they can't even run a computer.
MR. FOWLER: So what do we do? We divert the organic
solid waste from landfilling just as the good doctor of composting
was talking about earlier.
There's a very large percentage of your solid waste stream.
I use the number 60 percent. That's the number that EPA gives
out for the average in the U.S. I would imagine Collier County is
fairly similar to that, but not only do we compost the waste, we
recover energy from the waste. We are throwing away energy
when we throw organic waste in the landfill. We are also
creating problems for the environment. We have the methane
problem, which we've heard about earlier, and there's well-
documented problems with landfills impacting ground water.
Next slide, please. What we do is we take the waste, we
clean it up. We take out the contaminants so we don't need a
pure organic waste. We like it as clean as we can get, but we
take out the contaminants which are mainly metal, plastic, and
glass. We then put it in a vessel, a big tank, if you will, and we
let the bugs go to work on it in an anaerobic environment, that
means without air, and those bugs produce methane.
Next slide, please. So the opportunity - this has been
already touched on. These are very round numbers. I don't have
the exact numbers for Collier County, but you guys are very close
rapidly approaching 500,000 tons per year of solid waste. Of
this, that 50 to 60 percent -- let's call it 250 to 300,000 tons is
organic. If we could capture all of that -- and I don't believe -- we
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June 11,200t
cannot -- certainly not tomorrow, but we can make a good crack
at starting that, we could power enough power for 10,000 homes,
and what comes out the back end is compost. That compost is
needed down here in these soils. We can produce about a
hundred thousand tons per year of high nutrient compost.
Next, please. Just so people don't go, well, this has not been
proven anywhere, that's our plant. It's up in Canada. You can
come see it tomorrow. That's December. That's December. It's a
little nicer there now.
Next slide, please.
180,000 tons per year.
This plant we process about 150,000 to
The next comment we always get is, it's
too expensive. You know, it's going to be this, it's going to be
that. Well, if you bring a ton of waste to me tomorrow, I will
charge -- if it's clean organics, I will charge you about 30 bucks.
And if you bring me waste that has contaminants in it, forks and
knives and bones and stones and all this stuff that ends up in
people's dumpsters, that will be about 45 bucks. So we are very
competitive.
Landfilling in the United States is very cheap. Twenty bucks
right now, we can't compete with that. I would be the first one
to say I can't compete with 20 bucks, but when I'm talking about
an incinerator at eighty-five to a hundred dollars, guess what? I
can compete with that. Five megawatts power from that plant,
it's about 5,000 homes and about 50,000 tons per year of
compost.
Next. What do we take? We take food waste, first and
foremost that's what we want. Along with food waste you get a
lot of fiber waste and paper waste, and along with that you get
cardboard and packaging. We can also go to specialty items like
food processing waste, for example, tomato processing and
melon processing and pepper processing.
We can take yard waste. That's not our primary goal. Yard
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June 11,2001
waste we feel is better handled aerobically. It's cheaper. It can
be done quickly. Thank you. And also deal with removal of
exotics, and my cohort will talk more about that.
Next slide, please. So this is what people say composters
can handle because there's bags mixed into it. There's all this
stuff that comes out of a restaurant's dumpster, and that's our
tipping floor in Canada. We process it every day.
Next slide, please. How do we do that? We make a pulp,
spin it up. Next slide. We pull out the contaminants, that's the
glass and metal. Next slide. We pull out the plastic. Next slide.
And we make the compost. Next slide. And we make the power.
Next slide.
So what do we do? We provide you with the whole
enchilada. I'm not asking you for $150-200 million. I will do this
on my nickel. What I need from you is a commitment to provide
the waste. I can't come down here -- I can't get financing from a
bank to put in an investment here unless they know I have some
waste to work with. We will do the whole thing. Finance it,
design the plant, build the plant, and do the operations.
Next. What are the benefits? Divert waste from landfilling
at a reasonable cost. I think we could do 30 to 50 percent
diversion. That's a modest goal in probably the next three years
with no money from the public. Provide the green power I talked
about. We can provide the compost for the soil amendment. We
can offset other emissions, bank greenhouse gas credits.
We can pass those along to the county.
MR. MUDD: Bill, you need to wrap it up.
MR. FOWLER: Okay. Thank you. Demonstrate that the
county and city are committed to sustainable practices. Thank
you very much.
MR. MUDD: Mr. Tesfai is the next speaker followed by John
Basic, Sr., and John is our last speaker.
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June 11, 2001
MR. TESFAI.' My name is Asfaha Tesfai. You were close.
I'm with a company called Future Energy Resources Corporation.
It's an Atlanta company that's basically formed to commercialize
technologies developed by DOE. The company and the
government has spent about $50 million over the last ten years
basically to develop this technology.
What is the technology? It's an advanced biomass
gasification process. It's a form of technology proven over
20,000 hours in a 10-ton-a-day plant. Following that we built a
500-ton-a-day plant which is in Burlington, Vermont. If you know
Vermont, to build something in Vermont it has to be very clean.
We have a 500-ton-a-day operating in downtown Burlington,
Vermont. It's flexible, can handle various kinds of biomass. It
produces a gas that's really substitued for natural gas. This gas
will go to generate power in power plants. It can go in to
process plants basically to process heat. It can also go into fuel
cells to produce electricity at very high efficiencies.
For those sites that are here, basically the process is a very
unique process. It basically separates the gasification and
combustion, and fuel comes in a gasifier. As soon as the
biomass heats, the gasifier, components are driven out. The part
that's left passes into a combuster where it's used to generate
the heat, and this can be separated between these two
chambers.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Could I ask a question? Would
you toll his time for just a minute. I wanted to understand this.
What produces -- what's the trigger to cause this to happen? I
mean, she has worms and he has something else.
MR. TESFAI: Basically, heat. You have to heat up the sand.
When you start the process, heat it up with natural gas. One, its
sand is hot and circulating and add the biomass. After that you
cut the natural gas and use biomass to drive the process as well
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June 11, 2001
to produce your product, gas.
We pull this gas at about 500 BTUs in heat content so it can
displace natural gas in many applications. The plant we have in
Vermont is here. There was a plant that was designed to handle
a hundred tons of dry contents. We operated it as high as 350
tons. It's a small plant, so it can be put in a very compact place.
And currently we are looking at several projects, about ten
projects, to deploy this technology.
We would like to propose this type of project structure
where we don't ask any money from the county. What we would
like to do is get a long-term contract with the county or with the
city, and then we will put the money ourselves and operate the
plant jointly, either with the county or with other counties. So
there is no money needed from the county to put money in. We
will put the money.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: How much land do you need?
MR. TESFAI: Most of the land that would be needed is for
storing the feedstock. This plant that's in Vermont is sitting in a
40 by 30 plot, so the reactor that's processing this much material
is 40 centimeters in size. This is wood, yes.
DR. JONES: That's not municipal waste?
MR. TESFAI: No. This is not municipal waste. But we have
over 20,000 hours in a smaller plant that we're going to use.
Really, what we're going to put together is Detroit Edison, and
the others we'll take them the wood portion of that material and
gasify it, and then the organic portion will go into composting.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: I see.
MR. TESFAI: Again, a broad range of biomass could be used
efficiently. Wood -- wood usages with gas, municipal solid waste,
urban wood waste, residue, pepper wood waste as well.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: You're standing in front of your
slide, sir. You might want to move.
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June 11,2001
MR. TESFAI.' One minute, sir. Okay. Let's see. Some of the
applications we're looking for, these processes include
repowering steam boilers for steam and power, replace natural
gas in industrial use. Use it as landfill supplement where other
processes are already in place. In Oregon, which has heating --
very similar heating plant in the infrastructure in place.
In terms of power generation conducent in distributing power
generation. In gas turbines and lC engines we have the vendor
General Electric as well as -- that indicated they would give same
performance as natural gas if we use our gas in these turbins --
natural gas biological gas turbin instead of having standard
turbin and the soluable oxide -- and fuel cell and replace
incineration or landfill.
Really what we have here is a technology that's -- where
everyone thinks about waste-to-energy, they think of ncineration.
This is another way to use waste to generate energy without
incinerating. Thank you.
MR. MUDD: Our next speaker is John Basic, Sr.
MR. BASIC: Thank you, Commissioners, for hearing me and
also the panel. You have had a very interesting evening. I come
from a small part of incineration. My name is John M. Basic, Sr.
I'm a mechanical engineering graduate of Illinois Institute of
Technology. I'm a veteran of World War II with action in the
Pacific on Okinawa for electronic training in radar and sonar. I'm
a Florida resident living on Marco Ireland. At 77 years of age I'm
still active licensing the basic technology in different parts of the
world. My office is on Marco Ireland. I have current patents on
the state of the art of combustion of waste fuels. The United
States Patent Office granted me several patents since 1984 with
the latest ones granted in 1995. They granted me a total of 873
patent claims of design and method. The same patents are
currently held in 33 industrialized countries.
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June 11, 2001
I have been actively in the business of waste energy
combustion business for the past 32 years. I was personally
active in the business of designing, building, installing more than
80 systems in the USA. Additional systems with licensees were
built, installed in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Japan, China, New
Zealand, Saudi Arabia, and Thailand with Mexico and Canada
also, which brings a total to more than 125 installed basic
technology systems. Each of these systems met the air pollution
laws an all installations. We currently have two systems
operating in two different hospitals here in Florida.
For those who wish more of my background, I refer
you to my internet web page called basic-energy, com. You'll get
25 pages of information there. For those interested in
background in modern combustion, you can reach me at my e-
mail, which is jmbasic@aol.com. I'm an associate member of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers Research Committee
and Industrial and Municipal Waste. I have been both an active
and associate member for 18 years.
I believe in using all forms of waste processing that are
economically sound. This includes prevention, recycling,
composting, combustion, and eventually landfills. I started in the
business of combustion in 1969. This was at a time when many
incineration systems had many pollution emission faults. This
spurred me in the development of new steps in obtaining clean
combustion. Many persons that may be against combustion as a
solution have not kept up with the modern developments made
by certain companies. Therefore, do not tag the entire field with
a wrong that may be still committed by certain waste companies.
Be specific in your judgments.
Economics of a solution is the long-term key. My
developments in combustion were made in the intermediate-
sized area. The largest model burns approximately 200 tons per
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June 11, 2001
day. When more is needed, we add units in parallel. Our size
also allows a municipality to divide and locate different zones
within the municipality. Travel and handling costs are also a
cost in time and money. Hours can be saved by not needing to
send everything in one place.
My present task provides me with a world perspective. I
know that through my basic technology and licensees that the
prefabricated unitized construction of a basic design can be built
and installed at much lower prices than prices quoted in the
newspaper this weekend. Therefore, the long-term costs with
energy recovery would be much less in dollars per ton of waste.
In about a month from now I'll be going to Nanhi, China, to visit
the facility that will be a 400-ton-a-day plant with two systems
side by side in Nanhi, China. And I know that through that --
through that source and our licensee here in the United States
you will be surprised what the costs may be.
I also -- a system in Japan which burns hazardous waste and
goes to a landfill that is lust ash in terraces, a very modern land
ash landfill. I can help you in any way. I'm over here in Marco
Ireland. I'm not selling hardware. I'm selling a system of
thinking. I'm open to any kind of questions that you guys face at
me,
MR. MUDD: Mr. Chairman, that was our last speaker.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: Okay. Thank you very much, panel.
Again, members of the board, this was an information session
tonight and with public input so we can get a wide variety of
possibilities and deal with the longer-term solution. I think
where we are we have bought the time to comfortably sit back,
relax, absorb all of this, and initiate a direction that will take us
to what I call a longer-term solution. But the young gentleman
that spoke said he didn't want my 50-year solution. That is only
a conceptual framework in which you can operate and need to
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June 11,2001
go. It does not imply that one's sole source would be good for 50
years, because in this modern world of technological
development, that will never happen.
COMMISSIONER MAC'KIE: Commissioner, if I could just say
this is a perfect segue to announce that tomorrow we are
considering the hauling contract for Waste Management and, you
know, we'll be looking at how we're going to provide that
flexibility long term, and since we have the captive audience of
people here who are interested in garbage, I just thought I'd use
the opportunity to announce tomorrow's the day.
CHAIRMAN CARTER: I think we have put together a way so
that we can sit back and relax and do what we need today so it
gives us the time to go to the future. We have made major
headway with this board and over, I would say, the last 12 to 16
months I think we have moved mountains, if you please, to get
where we are this evening.
So I am proud of the board. I'm proud of the people that are
here. I'm proud of our staff, and I thank all the people who were
in the audience for their patience in dealing -- and being ladies
and gentlemen tonight dealing with ladies and gentlemen. It is a
hallmark for Collier County versus what I have witnessed and
seen in the past.
We all -- we all should be patting ourselves on the back as we
leave this room tonight. Remember we may have differences,
but we're all here to share and find the best solutions for Collier
County. Thank you. God bless. Have a great evening. Back here
in less than 12 hours.
There being no further business for the good of the County,
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June 11, 2001
the meeting was adjourned by order of the Chair at 10 p.m.
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS/EX
OFFICIO GOVERNING BOARD(S) OF
SPECIAL DISTRICTS UNDER ITS
./DWIGHT E,i~BROCK, CLERK
: TheSe minutes approved by the Board on ~- 3 I- ~ I
presented ~ or as corrected .
CHAIRMAN
, as
TRANSCRIPT PREPARED ON BEHALF OF DONOVAN COURT
REPORTING, INC., BY CAROLYN J. FORD, COURT REPORTER
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