Seattle to increase 'garbage power'
Jan 21 - United Press International
Seattle, which gets a small amount of electricity from its own trash,
plans to increase its garbage power significantly, city officials say.
The city of 602,000 plans to outfit a second landfill to pump methane
gas from refuse by 2012, adding to an existing landfill in Arlington,
Ore., where Seattle's garbage is taken by train, officials said.
The city first began getting electricity from the Arlington plant in
October.
"This is part of our strategy," City Councilman Bruce Harrell, chairman
of the council's Energy, Technology and Civil Rights Committee, told the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer. "This is part of our vision."
A network of pipes moves the methane from the tons of garbage
in the Arlington landfill into a compression facility, which sends it to
internal combustion engines. The engines turn generators that produce
5.7 megawatts of electricity sent up the power grid, enough to supply
about 5,600 homes.
Seattle uses about 1,132 megawatts, the Seattle City Light utility
averages. About 89 percent of the utility's power comes from
hydroelectric dams, 5.6 percent from nuclear energy, 3.4 percent from
wind, 1.3 percent from coal and 0.5 percent from natural gas, the
utility says.
The methane-extraction arrangement is part of a 20-year contract between
the city and national garbage-management firm Waste Management Inc. of
Houston, which built the system and charges the city about $2.5 million
annually, Harrell said.
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