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Umesh K Baveja B.Tech, MBA

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Title: Umesh K Baveja B.Tech, MBA


1
Waste to Energy (WTE) Is it the solution to
Indias waste problem?
  • Umesh K Baveja B.Tech, MBA
  • December 2004, Bangalore

2
WTE in India Background
  • First ambitious program to encourage WTE launched
    in 1995
  • To demonstrate that WTE is possible
  • Long-term target of producing 1700MW of energy
    from priority waste streams
  • Operated under the aegis of National BioEnergy
    Board (NBB), Ministry of Non-conventional Energy
    Sources (MNES)
  • Has an elevated status due to the contribution to
    reducing greenhouse gas emissions and in
    encouraging the integration of best practice
    waste collection and transfer to Energy
  • 16 cost sharing projects usage of
    Bio-methanation
  • To establish a fiscal and financial regime
    necessary for WTE

3
Energy from Waste
  • Potential of Power Generation in India from Waste
  • Urban and Municipal Wastes 1000 MW
  • Industrial Wastes 700 MW
  • (Dairy, Distillery, Press Mud, Tannery,
  • Pulp and Paper and Food Processing
  • Industries)
  • TOTAL 1700 MW
  • Common perception WTE is most applicable to
    India
  • Reduces waste by 60 - 90
  • Recovers resources
  • Aids safe disposal of waste avoids pollution of
    land, water and air
  • Reduces Greenhouse gases

? But, is WTE the solution for Indias waste
problem?
4
Physical Characteristics of typical MSW in India
Contents Available in
Paper 4.68
Plastics 0.71
Metals 0.64
Glass 0.45
Ash and Fine Earth 40.03
Total Compostable matter 38.75
5
Chemical Characteristics of typical MSW in India
Characteristics availability
Moisture content 25.2
Organic matter 23.4
Carbon 13.08
Nitrogen 0.58
P as P2O5 0.66
K as K2O 0.70
6
Composition of urban solid waste in Indian cities
7
Is WTE the answer to Indias waste problem? (1)
  • Indian waste unsuitable for production of energy
  • 80 of the waste in India is organic and moist
  • Have low Calorific value (800 - 1,050 Kilo
    calories per kilogram)
  • Experience in Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai (see
    notes page)
  • WTE technologies are regarded as unused,
    suspect technologies
  • WTE tech introduced in India so far are NOT based
    on a world-wide tried and tested model
  • Technologies like bio-methanation, incineration,
    combustion etc have toxic by-products that cause
    serious environmental problems like Acid rain, fog

? WTE technologies / projects are environment
unfriendly
8
Is WTE the answer to Indias waste problem? (2)
  • Cost of a typical 5MW WTE plant Rs 40 crores
  • Consumption 150 tons of urban waste for each MW
    of electricity

Which is an investment of Rs 8 crore per MW ie,
FOUR times cost of conventional Thermal power!!

And, the subsidy exceeds 50 of total project
cost!
Which is
An unjustifiable public investment of Rs 20 crore
for 800 tonnes of urban waste disposal! And a
cost that should be borne specifically by the
waste generator
? WTE projects are economically unviable in India
9
WTE Projects in Maharashtra
Municipal Corporation Promoter Capacity
Municipal Council of Greater Mumbai a) MSW Pvt. Ltd, Mumbai b) Waste Management Ind. Ltd, Mumbai c) EDL India Ltd, New Delhi 14.98 MW 10.0 MW 21.0 MW
Kalyan Dombivali Municipal Corp Not Finalised 5.52 MW
Pimpri-Chinchwad Municipal Corpn Soundcraft Indus, Mumbai 3.9 MW
TOTAL 51.88 MW
10
WTE plant Lucknow
  • 5 MW Power Generation Project for MSW
  • Promoter
  • Asia Bio-Energy (A consortium of companies in
    Austria,Germany, Singapore and India)
  • Technology
  • BIMA (Biogas tech) from Austria plus some
    equipment from Germany
  • Capacity
  • 5.0 MW (nett), 5.6 MW (gross) power, 80 TPD
    manure
  • Input waste
  • About 500 TPD
  • Project cost
  • Rs 73 crore

11
WTE plant Lucknow
12
WTE major processes involved
  • Pre-treatment Removal of inerts / inorganic /
    non-biodegradable matter and homo-genisation of
    feedstock
  • Energy Recovery Anaerobic Digestion /
    Gasification / Combustion
  • Post-Treatment Stabilisation of treated /
    processed material for final disposal /
    utilisation

13
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (1)
  • Incineration is the most costly discard
    management option
  • Incinerators are at least two times more
    expensive than landfills

Capital costs of incineration v/s recycling and
composting
14
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (2)
  • Incinerators contribute to countries'
    indebtedness
  • In the US, on a per ton basis, sorting and
    processing recyclables alone sustains 11 times
    more jobs than incineration
  • Incinerators are capital-intensive rather than
    labor-intensive
  • While Recycling / Composting is more
    labor-intensive than capital-intensive

15
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (3)
  • Wet organic materials, common in a country like
    India, may reduce the capacity of or shut down
    incinerators
  • In 1986 in Delhi, an incinerator was closed
    within a week after its completion because the
    garbage from the surrounding communities was too
    wet to burn. The facility cost more than US10
    million to build!!

16
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (4)
  • Incineration will adversely impact the informal
    sector and the informal sector will diversely
    impact incineration
  • Incinerators will impose hardships on if not
    jeopardize waste pickers livelihoods
  • Energy revenues from incinerators are often
    over-estimated

17
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (5)
  • Incinerators may require transfer stations, which
    is an additional cost
  • Pollution control equipment and pollution
    regulation and enforcement are expensive and
    increase costs
  • Incinerators are major contributors to air
    pollution
  • release pollutants such as dioxins, heavy metals,
    oxides of nitrogen, sulfur oxides, particulate
    matter, and numerous volatile organic compounds
    into the atmosphere
  • Neither high temperatures nor pollution control
    equipment can make incinerators safe

18
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (6)
  • Incinerators produce a toxic ash that requires
    disposal in engineered landfills, significantly
    adding to costs
  • Ash management poses severe environmental and
    economic problems
  • Incinerators often receive far less tonnage than
    they were designed to process, leading to
    financial problems
  • Example Montgomery County, Maryland, US

19
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (7)
  • Lack of infrastructure in lesser industrialized
    countries may doom incinerators to financial
    failure
  • Citizens and taxpayers pay for incinerators'
    financial problems
  • Construction of incinerators generally ties
    governments into long-term contracts guaranteeing
    delivery of waste tonnage to the facilities at a
    specified fee (these fees usually escalate as
    time passes)

20
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (8)
  • Incinerators hamper least-cost options such as
    recycling
  • Materials commonly burned in incinerators such as
    paper, garden discards, and some plastics have a
    much higher value when used as raw materials than
    when used as fuel
  • Incineration consultants and "experts" can add
    millions to the costs

21
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (9)
  • Incineration's high investment costs increase
    potential for corruption
  • Incinerators not only put the livelihoods of
    waste pickers at risk, but they also reduce
    overall employment and business opportunities
    from reuse and recycling

Job creation in the US from reuse and recycling
versus disposal
22
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (10)
  • Incineration has high public health costs
  • Numerous studies have reported increased
    incidence of cancers, respiratory ailments, and
    congenital birth defects among residents residing
    near incinerators
  • Incineration wastes resources and energy
  • If the United States burned all its municipal
    waste it would contribute less than 1 of the
    countrys energy needs (Source Dr. Paul Connett,
    Municipal Waste Incineration A Poor Solution
    for the Twenty First Century)

23
Incineration is a losing Financial proposition
for all (10)
  • Incinerators lower property values
  • truck traffic, blowing trash, birds and rats
    attracted to trash, noise, odor, and pollution
    caused by incinerators can all contribute to a
    drop in property values
  • Incineration encourages continued waste
    generation, diverts attention from real clean
    production and zero waste solutions, and
    reinforces the notion that unwanted discards are
    a local community responsibility and cost

24
In summary, three to five times more energy can
be saved by recycling materials than by burning
them!!
25
So, what are the alternatives?
  • Recycling
  • Composting

26
The Alternatives Examples (1)
  • Mumbai
  • A neighborhood participating in the Advanced
    Locality Management program in Andheri, Mumbai
    reduced its garbage disposal by half within two
    years (source Shiv Kumar, Mumbaiites resort to
    self-help to tackle civic issues, India Abroad
    News Service, June 5, 2000)
  • Chennai
  • A community-based organization, Exnora
    International, has developed a decentralized
    recycling / composting approach that has the
    potential to divert 90 of municipal discards

? High waste prevention and diversion levels are
possible and cost-effective
27
The Alternatives Examples (2)
  • Pune
  • Municipal government granted adult waste pickers
    authority to collect recyclable scrap by
    endorsing photo identification membership cards
    for a newly formed waste picker collective
  • Further promoted public awareness of a new
    discards segregation system in which the waste
    pickers collect, at curbside, segregated organic
    and recyclable materials
  • Households pay a mandatory fee to the waste
    pickers in return for this service. This program
    has benefited everyone involved (source Poornima
    Chikarmane and Lakshmi Narayan, Formalising
    Livelihood Case of Wastepickers in Pune,
    Economic and Political Weekly, October 7, 2000)

? Collecting segregated recyclables and organics
for composting
28
The Alternatives Examples (3)
  • Patna
  • Provides little door-to-door waste collection,
    and does not operate any composting facilities or
    sanitary landfills
  • Some of the apartment dwellers have created an
    innovative way to handle their organic discards
    using their balconies and window sills
  • Residents combine organic waste, soil, floor
    sweepings, and dried moss from roof tops in clay
    pots. The mixture matures into compost in three
    to four months. Residents use the finished
    compost to grow flowers, ornamental plants,
    spinach, and tomatoes (source I. Maumdar,
    India, Warmer Bulletin, Number 34, August 1999,
    p. 3.)

? Vermicomposting
29
Chennai Incineration vs Recycling approach
30
The key to healthy communities is to redirect the
millions of dollars in investments slated for
incineration systems into waste prevention and
reduction and zero waste systems that maximize
both return on investments and economic
development opportunities
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