World Waste to Energy City Summit MK Waste Recovery Park · Ferrovial • Ferrovial is one of the...
Transcript of World Waste to Energy City Summit MK Waste Recovery Park · Ferrovial • Ferrovial is one of the...
World Waste to Energy
City Summit
MK Waste Recovery Park
11 May 2016
The Problem (or opportunity?)
• Government targets – Landfill Directive & Renewable Energy Directive
• Increasing landfill tax– £7 / Te in 1996 to £80 / Te from 2014 and growing
• Growth of Milton Keynes– Forecast 60,000 tpa in 2016 to 80,000 tpa in 2040
• Sustainability– Landfill generates 40% of the UK’s methane
emissions
• Supply and demand– Waste (demand) outstrips capacity (supply) in region
• MKC Policy & Strategy– 5% household waste to landfill by 2020
– 65% recycling by 2020
– 30 mile proximity
– Cleaner, greener, safer, healthier MK
– Develop a Residual Waste Treatment Facility
The Challenge
• Design Build with a 15 year Operation (medium term contract)
• Residual life of facility >10 years (25 years)
• Pre Treatment - Increase recycling & recover value
• Meaningful Biological Stage - Maximise recovery from waste
• Advanced Thermal Treatment - Diversion from landfill & renewable energy generation
• Utilise the Dickens Road site
• Minimise the carbon impact of managing waste
• Flexibility and sustainability
• Local and complementary to existing services
• Reduce cost for local tax payer (based on MKC waste only)
• Transfer of risk to the contractor
The Solution
Milton Keynes Waste Recovery Park
Contract Awarded 26th June 2013
Who are AmeyCespa?
• AmeyCespa is a joint venture between 2 sister companies owned by Ferrovial
• Ferrovial is one of the world's largest infrastructure companies
• Amey is an integrated public services provider in the UK
• Cespa is one of Spain’s major Waste Management Companies– 40 Years of Operations Experience
– 14,000 Employees in Waste
– 7,500,000 tonnes per year
– 795 Local Authority Clients
– 90 Facilities across Europe
• AmeyCespa rebranded as Amey in 2015
Construction Progress
Pre-demolition
Colossus
August 2014
October 2014
November 2014
January 2015
February 2015
March 2015
April 2015
April 2015 - New Boiler Arrives On Site
May 2015
June 2015
July 2015
August 2015
September 2015
October 2015
November 2015
December 2015
February 2016
Milton Keynes Waste Recovery Park
Residual (black bag) Waste Treatment Facility
Co-Location of Waste Facilities
New
Depot
Site
MRF
Site of
Residual
Waste Treatment
The ‘Installation’
3 Waste Treatment ‘Facilities’
Tipping Hall and Mechanical Treatment
Stadler ‘Dirty Materials Recovery Facility’
Biological Treatment
Jones Celtic Bioenergy Dry Anaerobic Digestion
Advanced Thermal Treatment
Energos Starved Air Gasification Technology
MKWRP Overview
132,000 Tonnes
‘Residual Waste’
14,000 Tonnes
Recyclate
5,000 Ash /
Rejects to landfill
9,000 Ash
Recycled
4,000 Sweepings and 28,000 Organics to AD/IVC
93,000 RDF to ATT
7MW Electricity
Solution in Numbers
Education and visitor
centre for community
use >150 visits per year
with ‘class room’ to sit
65 people.
Creating enough electricity to
power 11,000 similar to the
number of households in
Wolverton and Newport
Pagnell combined
Increasing recycling –
an extra 10%
Creating renewable
energy (1MWe) from
residual organic waste
instead of being landfilled
£50million saving for
Milton Keynes Council
tax payers
Creating 10,000 tonnes of
aggregates from bottom ash
each year
Creating 45 full time
jobs and up to 200 FTEs
during constructionHelp the council divert
95% of waste from
Landfill saving a huge
tax bill
Reducing Global warming
potential by the equivalent of 1
million road trips MK to London
(c16,500 tonnes CO2 saved
per year)
£140million Investment
(£129million from MKC)
The End! – or just the beginning?
ANY
QUESTIONS?
+441908 252577