Oct 10 2012
Covanta Energy, a world leader in sustainable waste management and renewable energy, today announced that it has completed the expansion of the H-POWER Energy-from-Waste (EfW) facility, owned by the City and County of Honolulu. Covanta Energy is the designer, builder and operator of the facility, which is an integral component of the City and County's comprehensive solid waste management program.
The expansion added a third boiler, which increases the facility's capacity by 900 tons of municipal solid waste per day. This brings the facility's total daily capacity to 3,000 tons and allows Covanta to now process all of the island's post-recycled municipal solid waste at the facility, diverting waste from landfills. The expansion will also enable the facility to produce approximately 90 megawatts of renewable energy (gross generation) -- close to eight percent of Oahu's total power needs.
"Covanta is proud of our successful partnership with the City and County of Honolulu. The completed third boiler marks three years of hard work by the Covanta team, and celebrates the innovative thinking of the City and County in making the decision to move forward with this expansion. The completed project brings a multitude of benefits including increased diversion of waste from landfills, reduction of greenhouse gases, more renewable energy and new jobs that will make a significant impact on Oahu's economy and energy independence," said Seth Myones, executive vice president and chief operating officer of Covanta.
In addition, the facility will help Oahu become more energy independent by eliminating the need for one million barrels of imported oil and reducing greenhouse gas emissions by almost one million tons each year due to the avoidance of methane from landfills, the offset of greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel electrical production and the recovery of metals for recycling.
"By reducing our dependence on fossil fuels and creating energy from trash, H-POWER benefits the City environmentally and financially," said Mayor Peter Carlisle. "With the third boiler, we can now divert even more opala from the landfill and continue to emphasize more recycling."
The completed expansion project also marks the commencement of a new 20 year operating agreement with the City and County. Covanta began operating the H-POWER facility in 1990. In 22 years of operation, the facility has processed more than 13 million tons of waste, reduced the need for 15 million barrels of imported oil, saved 500 hundred acres of land otherwise used for landfills and recovered 450,000 tons of metals for recycling -- the equivalent of four aircraft carriers.