I wonder what the carbon footprint of this technology is.

Udhay, neck-deep in greenhouse assessments at the moment

http://www.technologyreview.com/energy/22703/

Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Converting Garbage into Fuel

Waste Management, a large waste company, gives technology for gasifying
trash a boost.

By Kevin Bullis


Waste gasification, a process for converting garbage into fuel and
electricity without incinerating it, may be a step closer to large-scale
commercialization. Last week, Houston's Waste Management, a major
garbage-collection and -disposal company, announced a joint venture with
InEnTec, a startup based in Richland, WA, to commercialize InEnTec's
plasma-gasification technology.

Waste Management will fund the new venture, which will be called S4
Energy Solutions, as well as provide infrastructure and expertise from
its waste-collecting and -processing businesses to make the technology
economical. The company, which will operate and market
plasma-gasification technologies, will be announcing specific projects
to build facilities later this year. The involvement of Waste Management
could signal that the technology, which has been more expensive than
other waste-disposal options, is finally reaching a stage at which it
can be practical. "Up until late last year, it was under the radar,"
says James Childress, the executive director of the Gasification
Technologies Council. "Now the big players are finally getting involved
in this."

InEnTec's technology, originally developed at MIT and the Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory, in Richland, WA, uses a multiple
high-temperature processes--including subjecting garbage to plasma
arcs--to break down organic materials into syngas, a mixture of hydrogen
and carbon monoxide. Syngas can either be directly burned in gas
turbines to produce electricity, or it can be converted into other
fuels, including gasoline and ethanol. Metals and other inorganic
materials in garbage can be isolated and recycled. The combination of
high temperatures and an oxygen-poor environment that prevents the
garbage from catching fire eliminates the production of dioxins and
furans, two toxic chemicals produced during incineration.

That core technology has been proved, says Joseph Vaillancourt, managing
director at Waste Management and the senior vice president of the new
joint venture. What's kept it from being commercialized, he says, is the
need to develop the processes for economically collecting and feeding
waste into the system, and on the "back end" pairing the syngas produced
with gas turbines for generating electricity, or other chemical
processes for converting it into fuels. Vaillancourt says that Waste
Management has already developed infrastructure for collecting and
processing waste and for using heat from incinerators for generating
electricity, and it will employ its "knowledge and wherewithal" to
develop an "integrated system" using InEnTec's technology.

S4 Energy Solutions plans to market the first gasification units in
specialized markets such as those concerned with the disposal of
automobile shredder residue or medical waste, for which landfills often
aren't an option, hence companies are willing to pay more to dispose of
waste. Eventually, they could be used more generally for municipal solid
waste, especially in rural towns and small cities that do not produce
enough waste for cheaper incinerator technologies to be practical. The
technology has the benefit of allowing customers to generate some of
their own electricity, which could make it more affordable.

There may still be hurdles to commercial success. Childress notes that
waste gasification may still face problems with local regulations. And
companies using similar technologies have failed in the past.
Nevertheless, some waste-gasification companies are reporting initial
success. For example, Enerkem, based in Alberta, Edmonton, has opened a
commercial facility to convert used utility poles into methanol and
ethanol. It has signed an agreement with the city of Edmonton to process
100,000 tons of municipal solid waste a year for 25 years, although
that's still a relatively small amount compared with other options for
disposing of waste.

-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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