&EFA
                                 United States
                                 Environmental Protection
                                 Agency
                                  Municipal Environmental Research
                                  Laboratory
                                  Cincinnati OH 45268
                                 Research and Development
                                  EPA-600/S2-81-181  Oct. 1981
Project Summary
                                 Impediments to  Energy  and
                                 Materials  Recovery
                                 Facilities for  Municipal
                                 Solid  Waste

                                 John V. Klingshirn and Oscar W. Albrecht
                                  Facilities for recovering energy
                                 and/or materials from municipal solid
                                 waste can contribute to reducing the
                                 Nation's dependence on exhaustible
                                 fossil fuels and virgin materials and,
                                 additionally, offer an alternative to
                                 direct landfill disposal of solid waste.
                                 Many cities and counties have there-
                                 fore begun to consider the feasibility
                                 of constructing and operating resource
                                 recovery facilities.
                                  The study summarized here reviews
                                 the financial operations of a selected
                                 number of existing resource recovery
                                 facilities and evaluates the impedi-
                                 ments to expanded recycling activity.
                                 The  eight facilities selected reflect a
                                 range of technologies, ownership
                                 arrangements, geographical locations,
                                 and  recovered products. Based on
                                 their costs and income data for the
                                 most recently completed fiscal year at
                                 the time of the study (generally 1978).
                                 none of the facilities were economical
                                 in the sense of providing the least-cost
                                 mode of disposal. All experienced net
                                 operating losses when capital  costs
                                 were taken  into account. Improved
                                 financial performance was projected
                                 for the subsequent fiscal year (gen-
                                 erally 1979). One facility was expected
                                 to become profitable, and three other
                                 facilities were expected to become
                                 competitive with other waste disposal
                                 alternatives in their areas.
                                  The most important barrier to profit-
                                 able operation  was the lower cost of
                                 landfill disposal; to compete with the
                                 charges for landfill disposal, the
                                 tipping charges by facilities were set
                                 below their actual operating costs. To
                                 a lesser extent, other impediments
                                 also resulted in reduced throughput,
                                 higher costs, and  unprofitable opera-
                                 tions. In many cases, however, the
                                 facilities would not have been eco-
                                 nomical even in the absence of these
                                 impediments.
                                   This Project Summary was devel-
                                 oped by the EPA's Municipal Environ-
                                 mental Research Laboratory, Cincin-
                                 nati. OH. to announce key findings of
                                 the research project that is  fully
                                 documented in a separate report of the
                                 same title (see Project Report ordering
                                 information at the back).

                                 Introduction
                                  Many cities and counties are presently
                                 considering alternatives to the sanitary
                                 landfill for disposing municipal solid
                                 waste (MSW), including the operation of
                                 resource recovery facilities. Processing
                                 MSW to recover energy and/or materials
                                 can potentially solve the land disposal
                                 problem by greatly reducing the volume
                                 of waste disposed of on the land.
                                 Volume reductions  of up to 50 percent
                                 are possible with  a shredding and
                                 ferrous recovery facility, 90 percent
                                 with an incineration and steam recovery
                                 facility, and 80 percent with a refuse
                                 derived fuel (RDF) production. Resource
                                 recovery  can also reduce the Nation's

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dependence on exhaustible fossil fuels
and  virgin  materials. Despite  their
potential, however, resource recovery
facilities currently provide less than 2
percent of the Nation's disposal require-
ments and based on currently available
information, it appears that the existing
plants in full operation  in the United
States have  generally not been con-
sistently successful financially, includ-
ing the 8 facilities in this study.
  The primary objective of this  study
was  to identify and evaluate the
impediments to profitable resource
recovery facilities for MSW. To accom-
plish this, the financial data  were
evaluated for eight selected operational
resource recovery facilities. The selected
facilities encompassed a wide range of
technical processes, ownership ar-
rangements, sizes, products, and geo-
graphical  locations. To enable  com-
parisons with  alternative modes of
disposal, a  "net disposal cost per ton"
was computed for each facility. Thiscost
was  calculated  as the total cost of
operation (including annualized capital
costs) less any revenues from the sale of
recovered energy or materials. Thus,
the net disposal cost per ton can be
thought of as the tipping fee needed to
break even.
  For resource recovery facilities con-
structed some years ago, their financial
performance when evaluated  on a
replacement cost basis  can be  quite
different than when capital costs are
included on a historical cost  basis.
Communities now contemplating a
resource recovery facility would need to
consider current construction or  re-
placement cost of facilities. Therefore,
to evaluate the present merit of recycling
MSW, the net disposal cost per ton was
also  calculated for  each facility  on a
capital replacement cost basis.
  The study assumed  that existing
resource  recovery  facilities were de-
signed and built to provide an economi-
cal (i.e., the least cost) disposal  mode.
Each facility's performance was there-
fore compared with its anticipated
performance to identify the differences
and  determine the causes of  these
differences.

Descriptions Of Eight
Specific Facilities
  The city of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania,
owns and  operates a mass-burning
water wall  incinerator with a design
capacity of  720 tons per day (tpd). The
incinerator processes all MSW collected
in the city as well as some waste from
surrounding communities. Recently, it
began to produce steam for use  in a
district heating  system owned  and
operated by Pennsylvania Power and
Light  Company.  Competition  from
landfill  disposal and overly optimistic
estimates of the waste volumes avail-
able from within the city were identified
as impediments that resulted in opera-
tion of the facility well below capacity.
Throughput of waste is increasing,
however, and the facility may become
economical in the near future.
  The town of Braintree, Massachusetts,
owns and  operates a mass-burning
waterwall incinerator with a  240 tpd
capacity. Difficulty in  establishing
regional cooperation with other munici-
palities, problems with meeting air
pollution standards,  and lack  of  suf-
ficient demand  for the steam that the
incinerator  produces contributed to
making the facility a high-cost operation
during  its early years.  Rising landfill
costs are beginning to make the cost of
incineration  more competitive with the
landfill disposal method.
  The city of North Little Rock, Arkansas,
owns a modular incinerator plant with a
capacity of 100 tpd. Until recently, the
plant, operated by the city, burned all of
the city's refuse and generated steam
for  sale to a nearby factory. During the
first 21  months  of operation, the plant's
level  of throughput averaged over 80
percent of rated capacity and it ex-
perienced no sustained shutdowns for
repairs. Problems with labor and man-
agement turnover, however, led  to a
rapid  deterioration of the plant in the
period immediately following this site
study. A new city administration closed
the facility in September 1979, and the
city is currently  negotiating with the
incinerator manufacturer to operate the
plant under contract.
  Monmouth  County,  New  Jersey,
owns and operates a reclamation center
that shreds MSW and recovers ferrous
metal before proceeding with sanitary
landfilling. It was originally hoped that
capability for producing refuse  derived
fuel (RDF) could be added to the facility
at some future  date, but the lack of a
viable  market has thus far prevented
this. The county was apparently en-
couraged by both state and  federal
authorities to believe that high tech-
nology  resource recovery operations
would be cost-effective, but the results
have been disappointing.
  AENCO, formerly the  Ail-American
Environmental  Control Corp.,  of  New
Castle, Delaware, built and operates the
facility owned by New Castle County for
shredding mixed municipal waste and
recovering materials. The facility was
constructed to  extend  the life  of the
county landfill and to provide the future
center  for resource recovery. New
Castle  County has received  some
benefit from the extended landfill life,
but the monetary value of this benefit
has not been quantified.
  The city of Ames, Iowa, operates the
first  municipally-owned solid  waste
recovery  system  in the country for
producing RDF. The net cost of waste
disposal based  on  RDF production has
been much higher than expected, but
the  city's expectations  for the future
remain optimistic. If fuel costs continue
to rise as in recent years and throughput
can  be increased, revenues from the
sales of RDF and recovered material are
expected  to cover all operating and
capital costs by the mid-1980's.
  Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is the  largest
U.S.  city  to dispose of  its MSW at a
resource recovery  facility. The facility,
owned and operated by the Americology
Division of American  Can Company,
sells RDF to the  Wisconsin Electric
Power Company. The operation involves
a cooperative effort between the city, a
private corporation, and a public utility.
High initial costs  and  operating dif-
ficulties with  the  complex recovery
system made the facility unprofitable in
its early years of operation. The plant's
performance  has  been improving,
however, and with rising energy costs,
profitable  operations are expected  to
become a reality in the near future.
  The Pacific Gas and Electric Company
(PG&E), a large investor-owned utility
service in northern and central California,
owns and operates a  methane gas
recovery system at the Mountain View,
California, landfill. Although the project
was only in its  demonstration phase at
the  time  of the  site  study, it  was
projected to be economically successful
upon becoming operational. Questions
concerning the  optimum technology for
landfill gas recovery remain,  but at
locations where feasible, it appears to
be  a promising method  of energy
recovery.


Are The Resource Recovery
Facilities Economical?
  In the accounting sense of producing
revenues exceeding costs, none of the
eight facilities was economical  at the
time of the study. Losses ranged from
$0.60 to over $36.00 on a per ton basis.

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Direct comparisons among facilities are
cautioned, however, because of dif-
ferences  in  accounting  systems,
financing arrangements, and circum-
stances specific to each site. Computing
a  net disposal cost per ton for each
facility, however, helped to rectify some
of these differences and permits general
comparisons.
   Each of the facilities charged a tipping
fee that was less than their net cost of
disposal  by way of recycling. This was
generally necessary to remain competi-
tive with disposal alternatives (i.e.,
sanitary landfills).  Projections of  net
disposal  costs indicated that  costs at
four facilities—Harrisburg, New Castle
County,  Ames, and  Mountain View—
were likely to decrease to the point
where they would be comparable to the
tipping fee charged (and thus competi-
tive with sanitary landfills in the area).
These four facilities employ different
recovery technologies: incineration,
shredding, RDF production, and landfill
gas recovery. The products and revenues
derived  from energy  recovery from
MSW—steam, RDF, and landfill gas-
are more profitable than  materials
recovery.


Impediments to Economical
Operation
  Resource recovery was generally not
successful (profitable) at the facilities
studied  because the costs for  landfill
disposal  were less. Prevailing  landfill
costs probably do not fully reflect the
true  social cost  of such  disposal,
however. The costs of disposal  at
sanitary landfills may  increase sub-
stantially in some areas under regula-
tions now being promulgated under the
Resource Conservation  and Recovery
Act of 1976(RCRA).
  Fragmentation of authority  in solid
waste management not only hindered
recovery operations at several sites, but
resulted in inability to organize regional
operations and uncertainty about future
government policies. High initial capital
costs adversely affected  financial
operations of facilities having RDF
production; the relatively new tech-
nology  at  these facilities required
frequent modification or redesign.
  Air quality regulations (a) increased
the cost  of energy recovery by neces-
sitating  expensive electrostatic pre-
cipitators and  (b) discouraged the
burning  of coal; thus  reducing the
  itential market for RDF cofiring with
 oal. Local restrictions on disposing of
 incinerator ash and scrubber residue
 also increased costs of ultimate disposal
 in several instances.
   Impediments such as regulations can
 restrict the  market through  lower
 prices. At the three incineration facilities
 selling steam, the sale price was based
 on the average price of oil; thus, oil price
 regulation has directly affected revenues
 from recovered energy. The price paid
 for RDF was based on the price of coal,
 which is affected  indirectly by oil and
 gas price regulation. Price controls had
 less effect on recovered gas revenues at
 the Mountain View facility because the
 product's customer,  Pacific Gas and
 Electric, owned the facility.
   Public utilities are normally potential
 customers for recovered energy. The
 regulation  of  utility rates thus  affects
 the demand by utility customers. Afixed
 rate of return on capital investments
 can also discourage utilities to under-
 take investments such as boiler conver-
 sions to allow cofiring  of RDF.  Under
 fuel adjustment provisions, many utili-
 ties are allowed to pass along increased
 fuel costs directly to their customers;
 this also reduces incentive for investi-
 gating the potential fuel cost savings
 through the  cofiring  of  RDF or using
 steam generated from refuse incinera-
 tion.
  Impediments to materials recovery in
both technological and economic areas
were noted. Adequate product standards
for recovered  materials are lacking
whereas tax subsidies for virgin mate-
rials discourage economical resource
recovery. Aluminum recovery has been
unfeasible primarily due to technologi-
cal difficulties.
  Full capacity operations would not in
itself have been sufficient to cover total
variable and fixed costs at four of the
facilities studied, and increased'ferrous
recovery would  not  have resulted  in
breakeven  operations at any of the
facilities. At the two facilities producing
RDF, improved RDF recovery by itself
would not have been sufficient  to
achieve  breakdown operations, con-
sidering the  prices and throughput
levels prevailing at the time of the study.
Also, extraction and recovery of alumi-
num, glassy  aggregate,  and bundled
paper would not have been sufficient to
eliminate operating deficits even  if
these materials were  recovered at the
rates originally projected.
  Although the impediments discussed
above were observed to adversely affect
operations, some impediments generally
believed to hinder resource recovery
had  little or no  effect.  Independent
source separation programs, for ex-
ample, that were in operation at half the
sites studied had little effect. Mandatory
deposits  on  beverage containers only
slightly affected operations at the Ames
facility. Seasonal fluctuations in waste
quantities also had little effect.
  In general, the financial performance
of the eight resource recovery facilities
studied were only moderately sensitive
to changes  in  various operating and
price  parameters. These  observations
were made for order-of-magnitude
changes in single parameters, however,
and did not take into account combina-
tions of changes  or additional factors
that could occur in actuality.

Conclusions
  At the eight  sites visited,  resource
recovery was not found to be economical
in the most recently completed fiscal
year (generally 1978). This was true not
only in the accounting sense of revenues
being lower than expenditures, but also
in the broader economic context of not
being the least-cost waste  disposal
method.  The  net  cost  of disposal
through  resource recovery facilities
generally exceeded the disposal charges
prevailing at nearby landfills.
  The impediments to successful  re-
covery thus included the competition
offered by the lower cost of landfill
disposal,  recovery operations  at levels
below design capacity, high operating
and  maintenance costs, and limited
markets for salable products.
  Profitable  resource recovery  opera-
tions at the time of the study were more
closely related to energy recovery than
materials  recovery.  Future  success  at
most of the facilities studied appeared to
depend  greatly on improved prices,
expanded markets, and increased rates
for recovery  of energy.
  The full report, submitted in fulfill-
ment of  Contract No. 68-03-2761 by
MATHTECH Inc., Princeton, New Jersey,
under sponsorship of the  U.S. Environ-
mental Protection Agency, was authored
by Ernest H. Manuel and Fritz W. Efaw.

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       The EPA authors John V. Klingshirn and Oscar W. Albrecht (also the EPA
         Project Officer, see below) are with the Municipal Environmental Research
         Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH 45268.
       The complete report, entitled "Impediments to Energy and Materials Recovery
         Facilities for Municipal Solid Waste," (Order No. PB82-102 302; Cost: $ 18.50,
         subject to change) will be available only from:
               National Technical Information Service
               5285 Port Royal Road
               Springfield, VA 22161
               Telephone: 703-487-4650
       The EPA Project Officer can be contacted at:
               Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory
               U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
               Cincinnati, OH 45268
                                         U.S GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE; 1981 —559-017/7387
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Center for Environmental Research
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