on IP'.- tal Protection
                       ; rn nt
                       ;: :.'0460
          Soli;' \V.]5-e
vvEPA
Multimaterial
Source Separation
in Marblehead and
Somerville, Massachus
          Energy Use and Savings
          Source-Separated Materials
          and Other Solid Waste
          Management Alternatives
          for Marblehead

          Volume IV
                                Bits
                       rom
                                 1979
                                & \
                          •I

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     An environmental protection publication (SW-824) in the solid waste
management series.  Mention of commercial products does not constitute
endorsement by the U.S. Government.  Editing and technical content of this
report were the responsibilities of the State Programs and Resource Recovery
Division of the Office of Solid Waste.

      Single copies of this publication are available from Solid. Waste
Information, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH  45268.

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               MULTIMATERIAL SOURCE SEPARATION

        IN MARBLEHEAD AND SOMERVILLE, MASSACHUSETTS

   Energy Use  and  Savings from Source-Separated Materials
and Other Solid Waste Management Alternatives  for Marblehead


                          Volume IV
             This  report (SW-824) was prepared
               under  contract no. 68-01-3964
               for the Office of Solid Waste
               Uc.  rnviroT^nta! Protection  Agency

               H-r.^ v.  '    •:/
               o-:-n f\ ,-:;', .",  - ,:';;'•! ~.-'.". 3-t
               C, ^^ «_> ^^ ~-  -
               Chicago, Ili'.-iois   60604
            U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL  PROTECTION AGENCY
                             1979

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        MULTIMATERIAL SOURCE SEPARATION REPORT SERIES
        This volume is one in a series of reports about the
        demonstration of multimaterial source separation in
        Marblehead and Somerville, Massachusetts.  The series
        presents the key results of demonstration programs
        initiated and funded by the U.S. Environmental Pro-
        tection Agency in 1975.  Intended to provide local
        governments and the interested public with useful
        information for planning, implementing, and operating
        their own source separation programs, the reports in
        the series cover a range of issues related to source
        separation.  The reports are:

             The Community Awareness Program in Marblehead
             and Somerville, Massachusetts (SW-551)

             Collection and Marketing (SW-822)

             Composition of Source-Separated Materials and Refuse  (SW-823)

             Energy Use and Savings from Source-Separated Materials
             and Other Solid Waste Management Alternatives for
             Marblehead (SW-824)

             Citizen Attitudes toward Source Separation (SW-825)
        Any suggestions, comments, or questions should be
        directed to the Resource Recovery Branch (WH-563),
        Office of Solid Waste, U.S. Environmental Protection
        Agency, Washington, D.C.  20460.

        Resource Planning Associates, Inc. conducted the
        studies and prepared this series under contract no.
        68-01-3964.
U,S. Enwtonmentci! Protection Agengy

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Acknowledgements
It would be extremely difficult to acknowledge the
great number of people who contributed to the success
of this complex study of source separation in Somerville
and Marblehead, Massachusetts.  However, we would like
to thank the following people for their help:  Mr.
Raymond Reed, Marblehead Board of Health; Mr. John
Clement, MATCON Recycling; Mr. Pat Scanlon, Northshore
Recycled Fibers, Inc.; Mr. Paul Anderson, Clark Equipment
Company; Mr. Alden Howard, Wheelbrator, Frye, Inc.; and
Ms. Penelope Hansen and Mr. Stephen E. Howard, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency.

Henri-Claude Bailly, Project Director
Lawrence Oliva, P.E., Project Manager

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Contents
 CHAPTER
PAGE  TITLE
 INTRODUCTION

 CHAPTER 1
 CHAPTER 2
      ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS FROM
      MARBLEHEAD'S EXISTING SOLID
      WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM

  5   Collection
  7   Preparation
 11   Transportation
 12   Treatment

      SAVINGS FROM SOLID WASTE
      MANAGEMENT ALTERNATIVES
      FOR MARBLEHEAD

 15   Energy-Recovery System
 19   Combined Source-Separation/
        Energy-Recovery System
 23   Landfill Disposal
 APPENDIX A
      Program Background

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Introduction
 Sanitary landfilling has traditionally been the method
 most widely used by municipalities to dispose of their
 solid waste.   Over the last decade, however, increasingly
 stringent environmental regulations have restricted the
 number of sites available for landfilling, while
 municipal solid waste streams have been growing in
 volume.  Consequently, many municipalities are investi-
 gating other  disposal systems, many of which involve
 recovering and recycling some components of the waste
 or burning the waste to supply energy for various uses.
 In selecting  a waste disposal system, municipalities
 usually consider the capital costs, labor costs, land-
 use requirements, and potential environmental effects of
 competing systems.  These are, and are likely to
 remain, the decisive factors; however, as the need to
 conserve energy increases, municipalities are also
 comparing the energy expended in operating a system to
 the energy that can be extracted from the waste.

 Early in 1976, the U.S. Environmental Protection
 Agency (EPA)  awarded 3-year grants to the communities
 of Marblehead and Somerville, Massachusetts, to demon-
 strate the source separation of paper, cans, and glass
 by residents.  For the first 2 years of the grants, the
 communities commissioned Resource Planning Associates,
 Inc. (RPA), to assist them in designing and implementing
 their programs.  For the third grant year, EPA engaged
 RPA to assess the results of the two programs and to
 study the characteristics of the communities' residen-
 tial waste streams.

 EPA has commissioned RPA to conduct studies and prepare a
 series of reports about the two demonstration programs.
 The reports concern the collection and marketing of
 source-separated materials, citizen attitudes toward
 source separation, the composition of the source-
 separated materials and refuse, the energy use and
 savings from  source separation and other solid waste
 management alternatives, and the community awareness
 programs developed to encourage participation in the
 source-separation programs.

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INTRODUCTION
This report presents our study of the energy use and
savings from Marblehead's existing solid waste program,
in which 25 percent of the waste stream is source-
separated and processed.  Energy is used in the exist-
ing source-separation program in the form of electricity,
gasoline, or diesel fuel expended in handling and
disposing of wastes and recovery materials.  Energy is
saved by recycling materials or generated by using
materials in energy-recovery systems.

The report also presents our findings on energy use and
savings for three solid waste management alternatives
that Marblehead could pursue.  In the first alternative,
all waste would be transported to an energy-recovery
facility near Marblehead and burned in a waterwall
combustion unit to produce steam for an industrial
plant.  Noncombustible residual waste from the unit
would be landfilled at the incinerator site.  In the
second, all solid waste would be hauled to the
Marblehead solid waste transfer station and from there
to the regional landfill.  The third alternative is a
combined system of source separation and energy recovery
at different rates of source separation:  12.5 percent
of total waste; Marblehead's current recycling rate of
25 percent; and a theoretical maximum of 40 percent.

To calculate energy use and savings, we separated the
existing and alternative systems into four independent
steps:
  •  Collection, which comprises collecting waste
  materials from curbside and hauling them in recycling
  trucks or refuse trucks to a processing or preparation
  site
  •  Preparation, which comprises sorting, crushing,
  shredding, baling, and compacting waste materials
  to prepare them for reuse or transportation to land-
  fill sites
  •  Transportation, which comprises hauling processed
  waste from preparation sites to treatment sites in
  heavy-duty tractor-trailer trucks

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INTRODUCTION
  •  Treatment, which comprises reusing wastes in a
  manufacturing process, burning them to recover
  energy, or landfilling.

We calculated the direct energy use and savings from
each step independently by considering such factors as
energy directly consumed by machinery and lighting,
energy directly conserved by substituting recycled
materials for virgin raw materials, and energy directly
generated by using solid waste for fuel to produce
steam.  For practical reasons, we did not calculate
indirect energy expenditures, such as energy consumed
in manufacturing the equipment used by the systems.

We then computed net energy use and savings per ton of
total solid waste (source-separated materials and
remaining waste).  We found that:
   •  Marblehead's existing source-separation program
   returns about 1.6 million Btu/ton of total solid
   waste, which is equivalent to about 12.8 gallons
   of gasoline per ton.

   •  Of the disposal alternatives, the combined
   source-separation/energy-recovery system with a
   40-percent source-separation rate had the highest
   energy return of 7.7 million Btu/ton.  In Marble-
   head, source separation increases the total energy
   savings because recycling noncombustible materials
   such as glass and cans saves energy that cannot be
   used by energy-recovery systems.
   •  Energy recovery of all wastes would return
   about 6.3 million Btu/ton
   •  Landfill disposal of all wastes would use about
   0.4 million Btu/ton.

In Chapter 1, we discuss our calculations of energy use
and savings for each step of Marblehead's existing
solid waste management program.  In Chapter 2, we
discuss the calculations we performed for each solid
waste management alternative.  Appendix A provides
additional background on Marblehead's solid waste and
source-separation programs.

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    Exhibit 1.a
    Energy Used And Saved In Marblehead's
    Existing Solid Waste Program
    (103 Btu/ton)


Collection
Recovered paper, glass, and cans
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Preparation
Recovered glass and cans
Recovered paper
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Transportation
Recovered glass
Recovered cans
Recovered paper
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Treatment
Recovered glass
Recovered cans
Recovered paper
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Total
Energy
Used

96
131
227

15
70
70
162

40
47
18
116
221

—
_
—
44
44
654
Energy
Saved

_
—


—
_
_
-

_.
—
_.
_
—

770
376
1,103
_
2,249
2,249

Total








(162)





(221)





2,205
1,595
   SOURCE  Resource Planning Associates, Inc.
   NOTE  Parentheses indicate net energy use.
Exhibit 2.a
Energy Used and Saved in Marblehead's
Solid Waste Disposal Alternatives
(103  Btu/ton)
                                  Source Separation/
                                  Energy Recovery System

Collection
Preparation
Transportation
Treatment
Total
Energy
Recovery
(224^
(103)
( 52)
6,678
6,299
12.5%
Rate

(132)
(108)
7,486
7,046
25%
Rate

(161)
(144)
8,005
7,473
40%
Rate

(197)
(199)
8,323
7,669
Landfill
Disposal
(224)
(103)
( 52)
( 59)
(438)
SOURCE  Resource Planning Associates, Inc.
NOTE  Parentheses indicate net energy use

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1
ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD'S
EXISTING SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM
 The reuse of materials from Marblehead's source-separation
 program conserves about 3.5 times as much energy as is
 used by the town's entire solid waste collection and
 disposal operations (see Exhibit l.a).  About 2.25x10°
 Btu/ton is saved by source separation, while about 0.65
 Btu/ton is used by equipment for collection, preparation,
 transportation, and treatment of source-separated materials
 and remaining waste.  The resulting net energy savings
 from Marblehead's existing program are about 1.6
 million Btu/ton of solid waste, or savings the equiva-
 lent of 0.29 barrels of oil per ton.  For Marblehead's
 total solid waste stream of about 8,700 tons per year,
 2,530 barrels of oil are conserved from the existing
 program of source separation and landfilling of remaining
 waste.

 Collection and transportation equipment use more energy
 than equipment used to prepare or treat source-separated
 materials and remaining waste.  Collection consumes
 about 35 percent of the energy used, and transportation
 34 percent.
 COLLECTION

 All of Marblehead's source-separated materials and
 remaining waste are collected on different days at
 curbside once per week.  Source-separated materials are
 taken directly to a materials processor in Salem,
 Massachusetts, less than 5 miles away, while remaining
 waste is delivered to a transfer station in Marblehead.

 Two gasoline-powered trucks that can carry about four
 tons of materials each are used to collect source-
 separated materials.  The trucks have separate
 compartments for paper, clear glass and cans, and

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS
colored glass and cans.  Fuel consumption for the
source-separation vehicles, as reported in town records,
is 3.09 gallons per ton of recovered materials collected,
or 386xl03 Btu/ton.  During July and August 1977, 892
gallons of gasoline were used in collecting 289 tons of
source-separated materials (1 gallon of gasoline equals
125xl03 Btu) .

The town has three diesel-powered standard 18-cubic-yard
compactors to collect remaining waste.  Fuel consumption
for the vehicles is 1.25 gallons per ton of remaining
waste or 175xl03 Btu/ton.  During July, August, and
September 1977, 2,083 gallons of fuel were used in
collecting 1,667 tons of refuse (1 gallon of diesel
fuel equals 139xl03 Btu).

Of the total solid waste stream, 25 percent is collected
by source-separation vehicles and 75 percent is collected
by refuse trucks.  Therefore, the energy used for
collection per ton of solid waste may be calculated as
follows:

(386xl03 Btu/tons of source-separated materials x 2J5)


+ (174xl03 Btu/ton of remaining waste x 2J?.)

   (96 + 131) x 103 Btu/ton

   227xl03 Btu/ton of total solid waste.
PREPARATION

Energy is used to prepare source-separated materials,
such as paper and glass and cans, at the materials
processing plant in Salem.  The energy used to prepare
remaining waste is expended at Marblehead's transfer-
station .

Recyclable glass and cans are delivered to MATCON
Recycling, Inc., in Salem.  Two small front-end loaders
transfer the materials from the point of delivery to

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS
a conveyor belt, leading to a magnetic drum where  the
ferrous materials are separated.*  They are then
flattened by one of the front-end loaders  in preparation
for transportation to a buyer.  Glass is conveyed
through a hammermill, broken into approximately 2-inch
cullet, and stored in large bins before transportation.

The front-end loaders are operated on gasoline and
propane.  All other equipment, heating, and lighting
are operated by electricity.

During October 1977, MATCON prepared 932 tons of glass
and cans, using 2,700 kWh of electricity,  584 gallons
of gasoline, and 104 gallons of propane.-*-  The thermal
value of propane is 73,390 Btu/gallon.  The energy used
per ton of glass and cans may then be calculated as
follows:

  (2,700 kWh x 10,286 Btu/kWh) + (584 gal  x 125xl03

   Btu/gal gasoline) + (104 gal x 73,390 Btu/gal propane
       *
   gas 7932 tons = 116xl03 Btu/ton.

Recycled paper is delivered to Northshore  Recycled
Fibers, Inc., in Salem.  The paper is dumped onto  the
warehouse floor and pushed into a large shredder by two
small gasoline-fueled front-end loaders.   The shredded
paper is conveyed to a baling machine, baled, and
loaded on a truck by the front-end loaders.  All
equipment except the loaders is powered by electricity.
The loaders are in operation approximately 6 hours per
day, using 2.5 gallons of gasoline per hour.2
1.  Personal communications from John Clement, MATCON
Recycling, Inc.

2.  Personal communications from Mr. Patrick Scanlon,
Northshore Recycled Fibers, Inc., and Mr. Paul Anderson,
Clark Equipment Company, Fargo, North Dakota.

*  Aluminum constitutes less than 1 percent of the
recyclable waste stream in Marblehead and is not accounted
for in our calculations.

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS
Approximately 11 tons of paper are processed per
hour.3  Consequently 0.22 gallons are consumed per
ton processed.  The energy used by the loaders is:

0.22 gal/ton x 12Sxl03 Btu/gal = 28xl03 Btu/ton.

No data were available on the operation or energy
consumption of the Northshore Recycling equipment.
However, similar equipment consumes 50 kWh of electri-
city to compact and bale 1 ton of paper.4

The energy used for shredding and baling may then be
calculated as follows:

50 kWh/ton x 10,286 Btu/kWh = 514xl03 Btu/ton.

The total figure for paper is:

(28 + 514) x 103 Btu/ton of paper = 542xl03 Btu/ton
 of paper).

All remaining waste in Marblehead's existing program
is delivered to the Marblehead transfer station,
reduced to one-seventh of its original volume in a
compactor, and loaded in a heavy-duty truck for
further transportation.  All equipment at the station
is powered by electricity.

Electricity for heating, lighting, and operating of
equipment costs approximately $300 per month, repre-
senting an average of 13,300 kWh consumed per month
at local commercial rates to process 1,330 tons of
3.  EPA, Demonstrating Source Separation in Somerville
and Marblehead (draft), February 1977, pp. 4-6.

4.  EPA, Environmental Impacts of Production of Virgin
and Secondary Paper, Glass and Rubber Products.  This
figure does not include electricity for lighting or
administrative offices.

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS
waste. 5  The fuel-fired value of purchased electricity
is 10,286 Btu/kWh.6  The energy expenditure for
preparation of remaining waste is therefore:

  13,300 kWh  x  10,286 Btu/kWh =  103xl03 Btu/ton.
   1,300 ton

Of the total solid waste stream, 12 percent is recovered
glass and cans, 13 percent is recovered paper, and 75
percent is remaining waste.  Therefore, the energy
used to prepare all solid waste is calculated as follows:
(116xl03 Btu/ton of glass and cans x  ioo) +
                              11
 542xl03 Btu/ton of paper x  IQQ) + 103xl03 Btu/ton
  of remaining waste

     (15 + 70 + 77)  x 103 Btu/ton

  =  162xl03 Btu/ton of total solid waste.
5.  Personal communications from Mr. Charles Eris at
Service Corporation of American (SCA), operators of the
station, and Mr. Frank Stevenson, Marblehead transfer
station.  Electricity rates are $1.60/kWh for the first
20 kWh; $0.67/kWh for the next 100 kWh; $0.37 kWh for
the next 590 kWh; and $0.19 kWh for all additional
kWh.

6.  U.S. Federal Energy Administration, The Data Base;
The Potential for Energy Conservation in Nine Selecte'd
Industries, 1975, vol. 8:  p. 6.  This value accounts
for boiler inefficiency and transmission losses.

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS                                 1Q
TRANSPORTATION

In the transportation step, source-separated glass,
cans, and paper are shipped to their  final markets and
remaining waste is transported from the  transfer
station to the regional landfill.  Source-separated
material and remaining waste are hauled  in heavy-duty,
diesel-fueled trucks.  To simplify calculations, we
assumed that twice as much fuel is consumed by trucks
when fully loaded as when returning empty.7  We also
assumed that the trucks all consume 3.45x10-* Btu/
ton-mile, even though they are used to haul different
materials.

Remaining waste is hauled from the transfer station
to the regional landfill in Amesbury, Massachusetts,
30 miles away.  Therefore, energy used to transport
remaining waste is calculated as follows:

3.45xl03 Btu/ton-mile x 30 miles/trip x  1.5 trips

= 155xl03 Btu/ton.

Source-separated glass cullet is shipped from MATCON
to Dayville, Connecticut, approximately  80 miles from
Salem.  The energy used to transport  recycled glass is;

3.45x10^ Btu/ton-mile x 80 miles/trip x  1.5 trips

=  414xl03 Btu/ton.

Prepared cans are transported to Newark, New Jersey,
for detinning and from there to Pittsburgh for reuse,
a total distance of 590 miles.  We assumed that the
trucks return fully loaded.  The energy  used to
transport recycled cans can therefore be calculated
as follows:

3.45xl03 Btu/ton-mile x 590 miles/trip = 2,035xl03

Btu/ton.
7.  Portland Recycling Team, Resource Conservation Through
Citizen Involvement in Waste Management:  Report to
the Metropolitan Service District, 1975.

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS
Baled waste paper is shipped from Northshore Recycled
Fibers to a papermill at Haverhill, Massachusetts, a
distance of 27 miles.  The energy used to transport
recycled paper is therefore:

3.45xl03 Btu/ton-mile x 27 miles/trip x 1.5 trips

=  140xl03 Btu/ton.

Of the total solid waste stream, about 9.7 percent is
recovered glass, about 2.3 percent is recovered cans,
13 percent is recovered paper, and 75 percent is
remaining waste.

Therefore, the energy used to transport all solid waste
is computed as follows:

(414xl03 Btu/ton of glass x  9.7 ) + (2,035xl03 Btu/
                            100

 ton of cans x 2.3 )  + (140 x 103 Btu/ton of paper x
               100

  13)  + (155xl03 Btu/ton of remaining waste x 7_5 )
 100                                         100

  =  (40 + 47 + 18 + 116) x 103 Btu/ton

  =  221xl03 Btu/ton of total solid waste.
TREATMENT

Treatment of solid waste consists of converting the
recovery materials into new products and landfilling
the remaining waste.  Energy is saved by reprocessing
recovered materials, which uses less energy than
mining, milling, or manufacturing products from virgin
materials.

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS                                12
About 3,970x10-3 gj-u of energy is conserved by producing
1 ton of glass containers from a 50-percent mixture of
recycled glass cullet and virgin materials.^  There-
fore, each ton of recycled glass cullet used saves
7,940x103 Btu.

Manufacturing pig iron from recovered cans conserves
16,340x10^ Btu per ton of iron produced, compared to
the manufacture of pig iron from virgin materials.9
This excludes the energy used during preliminary
detinning, for which data were not available.  Detin-
ning uses less energy than making tin from virgin
materials.  However, since the amount of tin in ferrous
metal cans is small compared to the amount of iron, the
energy saved by detinning would also be small.

Recovered paper from Marblehead is converted into
corrugated containers.  About 4,888x10^ Btu per ton
of manufactured corrugated containers is conserved if
recovery paper is used rather than virgin materials.10
One ton of recovered paper is used to produce 1.74 tons
8.  EPA, Environmental Impacts of Production of Paper,
Glass, and Rubber Products, pp. 149-150.

9.  PEA, The Data Base, 1975, pp. 342-345.  No difference
in energy use was assumed among steelmaking processes or
input materials.

10.  EPA, Environmental Impacts of Production of Paper,
Glass and Rubber Products, p. 77.  The production of
corrugated containers from virgin materials uses 23,800x
103 Btu, including harvesting, transportation, and con-
version of pulpwood.  No energy savings are realized from
the actual milling operations in making corrugated con-
tainers from recovered paper.  Milling packaging paper-
board, printing paper, and tissue paper from recovered
paper would conserve an additional 4,000xl03 Btu/ton,
5,000xl03 Btu/ton, and Il,000xl03 Btu/ton, respectively.

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ENERGY USE AND SAVINGS                                13
of corrugated containers, so the energy conserved per
ton of waste paper may be calculated as follows:

4,888xl03 Btu/ton of corrugated containers x 1.74 ton

of corrugated containers/ton of recovered paper

=  8,486xl03 Btu/ton of recovered paper.

Marblehead's remaining waste is treated simply by
landfill disposal, which uses energy in the form of
diesel fuel to power the bulldozer that spreads and
covers waste; we estimated that 59xl03 Btu are used
per ton of remaining waste.H

The composite energy saved in treatment processes for
all solid waste is as follows:

(7,940xl03 Btu/ton of glass x 9.7 )  +  16,340 Btu/
                              100

ton of cans x 2.3 ) + (8,486 Btu/ton of paper x  13 )
              100                               TOO


   59xl03 Btu/ton of remaining waste x  75)
                                       100

=  (770 + 376 + 1,103 - 44) x 103 Btu/ton

   2,205 Btu/ton.
11.  Portland Recycling Team, Resource Conservation
Through Citizen Involvement, p. 128.

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Exhibit 2.b
Energy Used and Saved in Combined Source
Separation and Energy Recovery System
(103  Btu/ton)
Source Separation Rates

Collection
Recovered paper, glass and cans
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Preparation
Recovered glass and cans
Recovered paper
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Transportation
Recovered glass
Recovered cans
Recovered paper
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Treatment
Recovered glass
Recovered cans
Recovered paper
Remaining waste
Subtotal
Total
12.5%

( 48)
(152)
(200)

( 7)
( 35)
( 90)
(132)

( 20)
( 34)
( 9)
( 45)
(108)

385
270
552
6,279
7,486
7,046
25%

( 96)
(131)
(227)

( 14)
( 70)
( 77)
(161)

( 40)
( 47)
( 18)
( 39)
(144)

770
376
1,103
5,756
8,005
7,473
40%

(154)
(104)
(258)

( 22)
(113)
( 62)
(197)

( 64)
( 75)
( 29)
( 31)
(199)

1,231
605
1,765
4,722
8,323
7,669
SOURCE:  Resource Planning Associates, Inc.

NOTE Parentheses indicate net energy use.

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2
SAVINGS FROM SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT
ALTERNATIVES FOR MARBLEHEAD                     15
 Using Marblehead as a base case, we examined the energy
 used and savings from three solid waste disposal
 alternatives:  recovering energy through a mixed-waste
 processing system; a combination of source separation
 and energy recovery from remaining waste; and landfill
 disposal of all solid wastes.  We examined the combined
 system at source-separation rates of 12.5, 25, and 40
 percent of total wastes.

 The combined system with a source-separation rate of
 12.5 percent would have a net energy savings of 7.0
 million Btu/ton, which is higher than the energy-
 recovery alternative which would save 6.3 million
 Btu/ton.  The combined system with a 40-percent source-
 separation rate would have the highest energy savings
 of all the alternatives:  7.7 million Btu/ton.  The
 combined system with 25-percent source separation would
 yield an energy savings of 7.5 million Btu/ton.  In
 contrast, landfill disposal of all waste would use 0.4
 million Btu/ton, which is equivalent to using about 2.3
 gallons of gasoline per ton (see Exhibit 2.a).
 ENERGY RECOVERY SYSTEM

 To calculate the amount of energy that would be saved
 using an energy-recovery system, we assumed that waste
 is collected at curbside and delivered to the transfer
 station in Marblehead.  Before the source-separation
 program began in Marblehead, all solid waste was
 collected by five compactor vehicles twice per week.
 Records on energy consumption for that period were not
 available.  However, we assumed that twice-per-week
 collection uses 29 percent per ton more energy than

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SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD
  	                                                 16
Marblehead's current once-per-week collection.-1-
Therefore, energy consumption for twice-per-week
collection is computed as follows:

174xl03 Btu/ton of solid waste x 1.29

=  224xl03 Btu/ton of solid waste.

The waste would then be prepared at the transfer
station using the same amount of energy as Marblehead's
existing system:  103xl03 Btu per ton of waste.

Prepared waste would be transported from the Marblehead
transfer station to an energy-recovery plant in Saugus,
Massachusetts, 10 miles away.  The energy used in
transporting waste to the plan may therefore be cal-
culated as follows:

3.45xlC)3 Btu/ton-mile x 10 miles/trip x 1.5 trips

= 52xl03 Btu/ton.

In the energy-recovery system, all prepared waste would
be delivered to the Saugus facility, dumped into a
large storage pit, and fed into a large waterwall
combustion chamber where it would be burned to produce
steam at a temperature of 875°F and a pressure of 690
psig.2  We assumed a boiler efficiency, less steam
transmission losses, for waterwall incineration of 67
percent.3  Noncombustible residue would be landfilled
at the site.  The thermal value of refuse in Marblehead
1.  Kenneth A. Shuster, "Fuel Conservation in Solid
Waste Management," Virginia Town and City, December 1974,

2.  U.S. Department of Energy, Overcoming Institutional
Barriers to Solid Waste Utilization as an Energy Source,
November 1977, p. 28.

3.  Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Solid Waste Utiliza-
tion Incineration with Heat Recovery, April 1978, p. 9.
Boiler efficiency is 69 percent, transmission losses are
2 percent.

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SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD                                17
is 4,340 Btu/lb.4  At the specified boiler efficiency
and steam temperature and pressure, the thermal value
of the steam would be:

4,340 Btu/lb x 2,000 Ib/ton x  67 = 5,816xl03 Btu/ton.
                              100

Steam would be delivered to an industrial plant, one-
third of a mile from the facility.  If the same quantity
of steam at the same temperature and pressure were
raised on-site in an oil-fired boiler with an efficiency
of 82 percent, the energy saved would be:

5,816xl03 Btu/ton x  82  = 7,093xl03 Btu/ton.
                    100

In June 1977, the Saugus plant consumed 1,210 MWh
of electricity per month for lighting, heating, and
operation of electric power equipment, and 1,497
gallons of diesel fuel and 34 gallons of gasoline for
mobile equipment.   The energy expenditure may
therefore be calculated as follows:

  (I,210xl03 kWh/month x 10,286 Btu/kWh) + (1,497

  gal of diesel fuel/month x 139xl03 Btu/gal of

  diesel fuel) + (34 gal of gasoline/month x 125xl03
                         •
  Btu/gal of gasoline)   7  30,517 ton of waste/

  month =  415xl03 Btu/ton.
4.  EPA, Multimaterial Source Separation in Marblehead
and Somerville, Massachusetts:  Composition of Source
Separated Materials and Refuse, November 1978, p. 28.

5.  Personal communications with the general manager of
the operating contractor of the Saugus facility.

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SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD                               18



The net energy savings for treatment in the energy-
recovery system are therefore:

7,093xl03 Btu/ton - 415xl03 Btu/ton = 6,678x103

Btu per ton.
COMBINED SOURCE-SEPARATION/ENERGY-RECOVERY SYSTEM

The highest energy savings would be achieved by
combining source separation and energy recovery.  For
this alternative, we assumed that the source-separation
system is the same as the one currently used.  However,
we assumed three different rates of recovery:  12.5
percent of the total waste stream; the present rate of
25 percent; and the theoretical maximum rate of 40
percent.  We assumed that energy would be recovered at
a rate similar to the one already calculated in our
energy-recovery alternative.

Source-separated materials and remaining waste would be
collected once per week.  To estimate the amount of
fuel used in collection, we assumed that fuel consumption
rates per ton would be the same for different rates of
source separation.  In reality, however, fuel consump-
tion rates would probably be slightly lower for higher
rates of source separation.  We used the same fuel
consumption rates for source-separated materials and
remaining waste as for the existing program.  Therefore,
fuel consumption for the 12.5-percent source-separation
rate is calculated as follows:
386xl03 Btu/ton of source-separated materials  x  12.5
                                                  100

+ 174xl03 Btu/ton of remaining waste x 87.5
                                       100

= (48 + 152) x 103

= 200xl03 Btu/ton of total solid waste.

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SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD                                19
Similarly computed for 25-percent and 40-percent
source-separation rates, fuel consumption rates for
collection are 227xl03 Btu/ton and 258xl03 Btu/ton,
respectively.

We calculated the energy used to prepare and  transport
source-separated materials and the energy saved by
treating the materials on the basis of our calculations
for Marblehead's existing program.  Energy used and
recovered from materials at a 25-percent rate of source
separation was the same as for the existing program;
for a 12.5-percent rate, energy used and savings were
half of those for the existing program; and for a 40-
percent rate, energy used and savings were computed  to
be 1.6 times the results from the existing program.

To compute the energy used to prepare and transport
remaining waste for different levels of source separa-
tion, we again used the energy use per ton of remaining
waste from the existing program and multiplied that
unit rate by the percent of remaining waste,  87.5, 75,
or 60 percent, in the total solid waste stream for that
option (see Exhibit 2.b).

The thermal value of Marblehead's remaining waste after
25 percent of the waste is source-separated is 4,950xl03
Btu/lb.6  The thermal value of remaining waste without
source separation is 4,340 Btu/lb.  Assuming  a linear
relationship between thermal values and source-
separation rates, we calculated the thermal value of
remaining waste for 12.5-percent and 40-percent
source-separation rates to be 4,645 Btu/lb and 5,070
Btu/lb, respectively.

Using an estimated efficiency for the steam boiler and
transmission losses of 67 percent and an oil-fired
6.  EPA, Multimaterial Source Separation in Marblehead
and Somerville, Massachusetts;  Composition of Source
Separated Materials and Refuse, November 1978, p.28.

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SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD
                                  20
boiler efficiency of 82 percent, the energy saved by
treating the remaining waste at a 12.5-percent rate of
source separation is computed as follows:


   4,645xl03 Btu/lb x 2,000 Ib/ton x  67  x  100  x
                                      100     82

   87.5  =    6,642xl03 Btu/ton of total solid waste.
   100

Similarly, the energy savings for 25-percent and 40-
percent source-separation rates were computed to be
6,067xl03 Btu/ton and 4,971xl03 Btu/ton, respectively.
We assumed that energy use in the energy-recovery plant
operations would be the same per ton of remaining waste
as for the energy-recovery alternative:  415xl03 Btu/ton
Therefore, the net energy savings per ton of total solid
waste in the energy recovery operations are as follows:
   6,642xl03 Btu/ton -


   6,279xl03 Btu/ton

12.5-percent
source separation;
  87.5  x   415xl03 Btu/ton
  100
   6,067xl03 Btu/ton

   5,756xl03 Btu/ton

25-percent
source separation;
-  75   x   415xl03 Btu/ton =
   100
   4,971xl03 Btu/ton -

   4,722xl03 Btu/ton

40-percent
source separation.
  60
  100
415xl03 Btu/ton =

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SAVINGS FROM MARBLEHEAD                                 21
Total net energy savings increase as the percentage
rate of source separation increases, as shown in
Exhibit 2.c.  As more materials are source-separated,
the energy savings attributed to energy recovery
decrease since fewer materials are processed in the
energy-recovery facility.
LANDFILL DISPOSAL

Energy used to collect and prepare total solid waste
for landfill disposal is the same as for the energy-
recovery alternative:  224x10-^ Btu/ton for collection
and 103x10^ Btu/ton for preparation.  All solid waste
would then be transported to the landfill in Amesbury,
30 miles away.  The energy use per ton of waste is
therefore the same as for Marblehead's existing
program:  52xlCH Btu/ton of refuse.  Energy used in
treatment is also the same for this alternative as
for Marblehead's existing program:  59x10-* Btu per
ton of refuse.  The total energy used for landfill
disposal of solid waste is therefore 438x10-^ Btu/ton.

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              Exhibit 2.c
              Energy Savings for Combined Source Separation
              and Energy-Recovery System
              8,000
              7,000
              6.000
Energy Savings
 (103 Btu/ton)
              5,000
              4,000
                                   10              20              30


                                     Source-Separation Rate (percent)
40
                           SOURCE  Resource Planning Associates, Inc.

                           I Energy Savings from Source Separation

                           I Energy Savings from Energy Recovery System

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Appendix A                                           23

 PROGRAM BACKGROUND
 As part of its evaluation of different types of resource-
 recovery programs, EPA selected Somerville and Marblehead,
 Massachusetts, for demonstration studies of source
 separation.  This appendix provides demographic infor-
 mation about Marblehead and summarizes how its source-
 separation program operates.
 DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION

 Marblehead is an affluent suburban community in the
 Boston metropolitan area with a population of 23,000
 and a density of 5,200 persons per square mile.
 Seventy percent of the families live in single-family
 homes.  Fifteen percent of the families rent their
 homes or apartments, and 85 percent own their residences
 The U.S. Bureau of the Census listed the 1970 median
 income for Marblehead as $12,600 per year, and the
 median education level as 13.2 years.

 For the source-separation program in Marblehead,
 residents place three bundles — flat paper, clear
 glass and cans, and colored glass and cans — at  the
 curb for collection on source-separation days, which
 are different than regular trash collection days.   As
 in Somerville,  no other preparation is necessary.
 Special crews with three-compartment trucks pick  up the
 materials.  In  addition to the weekly collection  of
 source-separation materials,  Marblehead has open  bins
 at the site of  the former town landfill for residents
 who wish to bring their materials.   The success of
 Recycle Plus  helped the town  to reduce the frequency of
 the remaining mixed household refuse collection from
 twice per week  to once per week.   The town also was
 able to reduce  its mixed-refuse equipment and labor
 needs.

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 PROGRAM BACKGROUND
                      24
 Salient features of Marblehead's program can be  summa-
 rized as follows:
 Program name

 Materials collected
 Recyclables collection
   frequency

 Refuse collection
   frequency

 Recycling crews

 Refuse crews

 Collection vehicles
 Disposal cost
   per ton
"Recycle Plus"

Flat paper
Cans and clear
  glass
Cans and colored
   glass
Weekly


Weekly

Two 3-man  crews

Four 3-man crews

Compartmentalized
trucks with rear-
loading hydraulic
buckets; 3 compart-
ments


  $18.95
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Fr. - .-i V. i :'.-.".-y
2iO £j;.-> ;v.-b-vn S'raet
Chicago, illinois  60604
                                                   ya!882.3
                                                   SW-824

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