Waste-to-Energy Exchange outlines opportunities from waste

Speakers discuss obstacles, such as public perception, as well as opportunities for clean energy through the use of nonrecyclable waste.

15 minutes of fireworks equal same dioxins as 100 years of WTE facility
15 minutes of fireworks equal same dioxins as 100 years of WTE facility

At the recent Waste-to-Energy Exchange, organized by Greener Package and the American Institute for Chemical Engineers’ (AIChE) Institute for Sustainability (IfS), speaker Marco Castaldi confessed to the audience that he had initially struggled with putting together content for his presentation. Castaldi, assistant professor of Earth and Environmental Engineering at Columbia University, had been assigned the topic, “Technology Obstacles and Hurdles to WTE,” for the one-day event, held in early November at the NYIT Auditorium in New York City.

“When I thought about this title,” he said, “I thought, ‘This is interesting, there are no technological hurdles, so what are we going to do here.’” What he explained to the audience, made up of representatives from consumer packaged goods companies, WTE technology companies, industry associations, and packaging students, was that “it’s an understanding issue.”

“What I like to tell people when they ask me whether different waste-to-energy technologies and developments will work is, ‘Yes, they will work; the engineering is there. The question is, how do you present the information to get acceptance for waste-to-energy technology.’”

Because, as Castaldi and other speakers advised, the question of increasing the number of WTE facilities—there are 86 in the U.S. currently—is not one of technological hurdles. The major challenges to WTE include negative public perception and state and federal regulations, including overly restrictive EPA pollutant standards, according to Ted Michaels, partner/president of AJW, Inc./Energy Recovery Council.

Michaels also added, “There are projects all over the U.S. being considered, but people are against it in some areas, not necessarily due to WTE, they are just concerned about change.”

But as Castaldi and others gave evidence of at the event, WTE is a proven technology that offers a tremendous potential for homegrown, renewable fuel in the U.S. As Paul Gilman, Senior vice president and Chief Sustainability Officer of Covanta, said, “Energy from waste is a sustainable solution to disposing of post-recyclable waste, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and producing clean, renewable energy.”

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