Pact Reached to Turn Gas from Landfill into Energy
July 24, 2007
King County, Washington
KING COUNTY -
Gas
produced by rotting garbage at the Cedar Hills landfill could warm homes and cook food by the
end of 2008 under an agreement approved Monday by the King County Council.
Virginia-based
Ingenco has agreed to pay $1.3 million a year for the landfill's methane, which would be sold
as pipeline-quality gas. The county would receive a share of any revenues if gas prices were
to go above a certain amount during the 20-year, renewable contract.
County
Executive Ron Sims said the methane plant would capture carbon emissions that have the same
climate-altering effect as 22,000 cars. "That's terrific news in our efforts to curb
global warming here in King County," Sims said in a statement.
King
County now spends $80,000 a year to collect and burn off methane at the dump. Ingenco proposes
to market the gas through a Puget Sound Energy pipeline that runs beside the landfill.
The
County Council authorized the county executive in 1992 to find a company that would turn the
gas into energy. The county signed a contract in 2004 with Bio Energy, a subsidiary of
Australian firm EDI, which planned to use methane to generate electricity.
That
generating plant wasn't built because of changing market conditions, said Theresa Jennings,
county director of natural resources and parks.
"We
feel really confident with this vendor," Jennings said. "They have a number of other
projects up and running in the United States. They have a good track record. This is perfect
timing in terms of the market, a perfect schedule to get things going."
Ingenco
operates six landfill-gas facilities and is building four others. The company, a holding of
private equity firm First Reserve, is buying Bio Energy's interest at Cedar Hills.
Source: "Pact Reached to Turn Gas from Landfill into
Energy" by Keith Ervin, Seattle Times Staff Reporter
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