humboldt regional organic waste digester california integrated waste management board july 14, 2009

44
Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Upload: shannon-goodman

Post on 11-Jan-2016

230 views

Category:

Documents


10 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester

California Integrated

Waste Management Board

July 14, 2009

Page 2: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Purpose:

Divert food waste from landfills

Page 3: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Why Divert Food Waste?

• ~20% of waste stream

• Develop diversion infrastructure:– AB 939 compliance– Population growth– Future legislation (AB 479)

• Reduce greenhouse gas emissions – Landfills emit methane– Waste trucked 190 miles one-way

Page 4: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Diversion Potential

Source: HWMA quarterly reports, waste auditsSource: HWMA quarterly reports, waste audits

Assumes 100% captureAssumes 100% capture

SourceEstimated

Tons / year Diversion

Arcata and Eureka Commercial

5,500 10%

Arcata and Eureka Residential & Commercial

9,000 20%

Page 5: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Food Waste Characteristics

• Wet

• Heavy

• Putrefies quickly

• Contains energy

Page 6: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Food Waste = Energy

75% H2O

25% Total Solids

85% volatile solids (VS)

15% fixed solids (FS)

VS + A.D. = CH4 + CO2

RENEWABLE ENERGY!!!

Page 7: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Renewable Energy Potential

Gas Yields of Various Organic Materials (m3 gas/ton)

25 36

50 55

70 75 80

90 102 110

120 129

170 195 202

220 400

550 660

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700

Cattle manure Pig manure

Poultry Whey

Fooder beet Beets

Vinasse Suger beet silage

Grass 1. Cut Green waste

Bio waste bio-bin Brewers‘ grain

Corn silage (pasty) Grass silage 1. Cut

Corn silage Food waste

Flotated fats Rape seed cake

Residual fats

Courtesy of M-Con Bio and Farmatic biotech energy ag

Page 8: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Food Waste in Landfills

• Methane (CH4)– ~23 x more powerful than CO2

• Uncontrolled CH4 emissions – Food waste decomposes: 4 months– Collection systems installed: 2-5 years – Variable LFG capture efficiency

Page 9: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Diversion Options:

Food Banks

Pig Farms

Composting

Anaerobic Digestion

Page 10: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Existing Diversion• Food banks

• Pre-consumer waste only

• Pig farms• Pre-consumer or post-consumer + treatment • Limited in local capacity• Produce high-strength waste

Page 11: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Food Waste Composting

• Aerobic decomposition• Produces soil amendment• Green waste used as bulking agent

• Process time 90 – 180 days• Emits some CH4, N2O, VOC• Kills pathogens

Page 12: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Local Compost Challenges

• Competition for green waste

• Food waste prohibited

• Odors

• VOC emissions

• Large footprint

• High rainfall levels

• Aerobic conditions = high energy inputs

Page 13: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Anaerobic Digestion

• Oxygen-free environment• Mature technology

– Wastewater treatment plants– Dairies & pig farms

• Produces biogas (CH4 +CO2)• Reduces VOCs• Positive net energy balance

Page 14: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Benefits:

• Renewable energy – Captures CH4

• Shorter process time• 25 vs. 120 days

• Smaller footprint• 3 vs. 20 acres

• Reduces waste• Soil amendment

Page 15: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Challenges:

• Permitting

• Collection

• Contamination

• Residuals

• Cost efficiencyBottle CapBottle Cap

Page 16: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Food Waste Digestion

• 70 in Europe

• East Bay Municipal Utility District

• Toronto

• UC Davis*

• Inland Empire*

Page 17: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Options:• Dedicated food waste digester + compost

• Co-digest with municipal sludge at WWTP

Page 18: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Hauling

Preprocessing facility

Lifter & Conveyor Belt Screening and

Chopping Buffer tank Plastics

Metals

Digester

Gas

Liquids & Solids

Combined Heat and Power

Heat Electricity

Onsite Grid Digester Landfill Land apply

Collection

Food Slurry

Compost

Food Waste Diversion Flow Diagram

Page 19: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Digester Feed Stocks

Page 20: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Digester Feed Stocks

Page 21: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Digester Feed Stocks

Page 22: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Digester Feed Stocks

Page 23: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Digester Feed Stocks

Page 24: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Scenarios

ScenarioTons waste

per yearDescription

A 4268 FOG + Whey + 50% Arcata & Eureka Commercial

B 7554FOG + Whey + 50% of Arcata & Eureka Commercial +

50% County commercial

C 9919FOG + Whey + 100% of Arcata & Eureka Commercial +

50% County commercial

D 11363FOG + Whey + 50% of Arcata & Eureka Commercial +

50% County commercial + 100% of Del Norte Commercial

Page 25: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Life Cycle Cost

Scenario Digester

(Million $)Business-as-Usual

(Million $)

A $6.5 $3.6

B $8.4 $8.3

C $8.7 $11.7

D $9.6 $13.8

LCC

Page 26: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Renewable Energy

•Assumes 35% generator efficiencyAssumes 35% generator efficiency

•Assumes 25% parasitic loadAssumes 25% parasitic load

Scenario MWh/year # CA house equivalents

A 888 126

B 1,569 223

C 2,059 293

D 2,359 335

Page 27: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

$$$Annual savings and Revenues

ScenarioHauling savings

($/year)

Offset Grid Energy at WWTP

($/year)*

Renewable Energy Sold to PG&E ($/year)

A $79,000 $85,000 $0

B $188,000 $105,000 $13,500

C $267,000 $105,000 $48,500

D $316,000 $105,000 $70,000

*Assumes $0.10/ kWh

Page 28: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

GHG Reductions

•Assumes 0.7 MT CO2e / MT food waste (CCX)•Assumes 0.524 lbs CO2 / kWh (PG&E)

Carbon Emissions Reductions

Scenario

Avoided long-haul trucking

(lbs CO2/year)

Fossil power replacement (lbs CO2/year)

Avoided landfill gas

(lbs CO2/year)

A 215,000 434,000 17,319,000

B 541,000 767,000 41,392,000

C 729,000 1,007,000 58,711,000

D 861,000 1,153,000 69,288,000

Page 29: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Project Development Plan

• Organic Waste Resource Analysis• Permitting – EPA Region 9• Pilot collection• Phase 1: Demonstration and testing

– Efficient pre-processing– Appropriate technology– Residuals management alternatives

• Phase 2: Expand to regional scale

Page 30: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

To conclude…

• Project Benefits include:– Divert waste from landfills– Generate renewable energy– Reduce GHG emissions– Retain $$$ in County – Create jobs– Increase regional sustainability

Page 31: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Acknowledgements• Gary Bird - City of Eureka • Clay Yerby, Gerry Snead - Elk River WWTP• Kurt Gierlich - City of Eureka • Paul Suto, Sophia Scota – East Bay MUD• Charles Chamberlin, Arne Jacobson – HSU• Cara Peck – US EPA Region 9 • Josh Rapport - UC Davis • Mike Leggins, Chris Choate - Recology • Brown and Cauldwell – Eureka WWTP Engineers • Dufferin Organics Processing Facility• BTA Processing – Canada Composting• Cedar Grove & Jepson Prairie composting facilities • Andrew Jolin – HWMA Mad River Composting Facility• Hambro Forest Products• Del Norte Solid Waste Management Authority

Page 32: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Questions?

Page 33: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

AB 32: Emissions Reductions Goals

• State-wide: 146.7 MMTCO2e

• Local government: 15% by 2020

• Waste sector goal: 10 MMTCO2e

Annual tons food waste in the California waste stream (CIWMB)

MMTCO2e / year

% of AB 32 emissions

reductions

9,663,405 7.5 3%

Page 34: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Source: Year% Food Waste in Total Disposed Waste Stream

% Food Waste in Commercial Sector

Scale

Humboldt County Source Reduction and Recycling Element 1992 N/A 18.62 County-wideCalifornia Integrated Waste Management Board 1999 N/A 17.2 County-wideCalifornia Integrated Waste Management Board 2004 14.6 18.8 State wideCalifornia Integrated Waste Management Board 2008 14.4 15.2 State-wideUS EPA 2007 18.2 N/A Nation-wideAlameda County Waste Characterization 1995 10.5 14.9 County-wide

Alameda County Waste Characterization 2000 11.9 16.2 County-wideAlameda County Waste Characterization 2008 18.7 26.1 County-wideOregon Statewide Waste Characterization 2005/2006 15.73 N/A State-wideMarion County Waste Characterization 1998 15.34 N/A County-wideMarion County Waste Characterization 2002 17.66 N/A County-wideMarion County Waste Characterization 2005 20.54 N/A County-wideAverage 16 18

Page 35: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Major costs for digestion Cost per unit ($)

Building ($/ft2) w/slab $100

50' Truck weighing scales $32,700

Foundation for scales inclu. Const. $20,000

Print Kiosk (for weight records) $4,000

Software capable of running reports $10,000

PC computer $2,000

Card Scanner $5,000

Odor control system $85,000

Front-end loader $118,000

Pre-processing equipment $450,000

Metering Pumps $40,000

Peristaltic pumps $90,000

Trommel screen $110,000

Buffer tank ($/ft3) $9

Digester ($/ft3) $9

Mixers $40,000

Post digestion tank (for gravity separation) ($/ft3) $9

Page 36: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Gas collection equipment $75,000

H2S Scrubber Tank $5,000

H2S scrubber media (Sulfa Treat) $5,760

Solids drying area ($/ft2) concrete slab $30

Monitoring equipment (SCADA) $100,000

Engineering Planning and Design $250,000

Permitting $100,000

EIR $250,000

New Full Solid Waste Permit $6,300

Geotechnical analysis $17,500

Wetland deliniation $17,500

Land Preparation $30,000

Infrastructure (fencing) ($/linear foot) $35

Infrastructure (roads) ($/ft2) $12

Program Design $100,000

New Water Service $110

Access Gates $10,000

Balance of systems (contingency) 30% of total capital

Page 37: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

O&M CostsO&M costs Cost per unit

Labor ($/hour) $22

Supervision and training ($/hour) $30

Insurance ($/year) $15,000

Water ($/750 gallons) $2.84

Iron sponge media replacement ($/year) 4,160

Equipment maintenance 50,000

Solids management ($/ton) 41

New Wastewater disposal permit fee (good for first 3 years) 450

Waste water disposal permit fee (not new) 250

Waste water disposal fee ($/lb BOD) 1

Solid waste permit annual inspection fee 3,788

Page 38: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Funding Options

• Regional partners share funding– Bonds or low-interest loans– Complete ownership– Revenues and “green attributes” allocated to facility owners

• Public/Private partnership– Shared ownership and operation – Shared benefits from “green attributes”– Shared revenues

• Performance contractors– Delayed ownership – option to buy after 6 years– “Green attributes” and revenues allocated to owner– Flat rate electricity at just below utility rate

Page 39: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Feed-in Tariff

• AB 1969 – “requires all electrical corporations to file with the CPUC a standard tariff to provide for payment for every kilowatt hour (kWh) of renewable energy output produced at an eligible electric generation facility”

• CPUC Decision 07-07-027– Tariffs and standard contracts for the

purchase of renewable energy from WWTPs

Page 40: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Feed-in Tariff

• PG&E: 104 MW capacity allocation to WWTPs• PG&E: 104 MW allocation to non-WWTPs• Rates based on:

– # kWh sold– Time of delivery – MPR set by CPUC– 10, 15, 20 year contracts

• Interconnection through FERC SGIP• “Green Attributes”

– To facility for generated RE they use on site– To IOU for RE sold to grid

Page 41: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009
Page 42: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Analysis Data & Inputs

• HWMA records• CIWMB• EPA region 9• Food waste digestion projects & case studies

– EBMUD– Dufferin Organics– NewMarket– UC Davis

• Eureka WWTP • Brown & Caldwell • Equipment manufacturers• Eureka City Garbage, Nor Cal

Page 43: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009
Page 44: Humboldt Regional Organic Waste Digester California Integrated Waste Management Board July 14, 2009

Regional Waste Streams