Landfills Anonymous

Landfills Anonymous - Where those opposed to the obsolete, destructive polluting process known as land filling come to share their ideas and technology aimed at creating jobs through Zero Waste.

75% of Riverbend landfill is made up of imported trash... 45% of which comes from one source... Portland/Metro. This mus...
06/24/2013

75% of Riverbend landfill is made up of imported trash... 45% of which comes from one source... Portland/Metro. This must stop!

Victory! After over 20 years of fighting, proposed  Joshua Tree regional landfill is nixed. http://www.huffingtonpost.co...
05/25/2013

Victory! After over 20 years of fighting, proposed Joshua Tree regional landfill is nixed.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/05/24/joshua-tree-landfill_n_3333862.html?utm_hp_ref=green&ir=Green

LOS ANGELES -- A regional garbage collection agency has tossed out plans to build a mega-landfill for Los Angeles' trash less than two miles from Joshua Tree National Park in the remote Southern California desert. Increased recycling and new waste treatment technologies have reduced the need to open...

Anonymous donor makes their message clear with giant McMinnville Billboard... STOP THE IMPORATION OF TRASH TO OUR RIVER!
03/05/2013

Anonymous donor makes their message clear with giant McMinnville Billboard... STOP THE IMPORATION OF TRASH TO OUR RIVER!

Landfills Anoymous presents its anti landfill message at a booth at the 3rd Annual Harvesting Clean Energy in Corvallis,...
02/10/2013

Landfills Anoymous presents its anti landfill message at a booth at the 3rd Annual Harvesting Clean Energy in Corvallis, Oregon.

Richard Lorenzo, Attorney for Cable Huston in Portland, Oregon enjoys a beer at Landfill Anonymous' booth dedicated to s...
02/10/2013

Richard Lorenzo, Attorney for Cable Huston in Portland, Oregon enjoys a beer at Landfill Anonymous' booth dedicated to stopping Waste Managment from destroying Oregon's farmland and aquifer.

Anaerobic Digester in California to the Rescue!  For Immediate ReleaseCountry’s First SMARTFERM Launched by Zero Waste E...
02/06/2013

Anaerobic Digester in California to the Rescue!

For Immediate Release

Country’s First SMARTFERM Launched by Zero Waste Energy and Monterey Regional Waste Management District Dry Anaerobic Digestion Transforms Organic Waste into Electricity and High Quality Compost Marina, California – January 25, 2013 - The Monterey Regional Waste Management District (MRWMD) and Zero Waste Energy, LLC (ZWE) held an open house today introducing the country’s first dry anaerobic digester (AD) utilizing the SMARTFERM technology for use in processing organic waste. The SMARTFERM technology, developed in Germany, will be the first of its kind in the US and will turn organic waste such as food scraps into electricity and high-quality compost for agriculture use. This state-of-the-art processing system represents the next generation of organic waste management strategies to maximize energy and compost production.

SMARTFERM’s 21 day batch process diverts over 99% of organic waste, reduces greenhouse gases, reduces reliance on landfills and produces a clean, green energy. The technology is semi-mobile, space efficient, prefabricated, and scalable up to 30,000 tons of waste per year. These attributes enable the customer to reduce installation time and costs when compared to other AD technologies. The SMARTFERM at the MRWMD is equipped to process up to 5,000 tons per year, creating 100kW of electricity or up to 3,200 BTU/Ton of Biogas with 58-60% methane content. The SMARTFERM technology will be manufactured in the US by a ZWE partner who is a leader in the manufacturing of waste industry equipment, Dover ESG.

Seen as a pilot program, the SMARTFERM installation will help determine the role of anaerobic digestion in the future of organics management at the MRWMD, considered one of the most advanced waste management districts in the country. For the past four years, the MRWMD has been composting food scraps in response to requests from the local hospitality community’s interest in a more sustainable use for its organic waste. This dry AD project is the next achievement in efficiency for the District, who will sell the energy created from the dry AD to the neighboring Monterey Regional Water Pollution Control Agency.

Anaerobic digestion (AD) has recently to come to the forefront of the waste industry. The installation at the MRWMD is the first dry AD project in the US for ZWE, with three others in the construction stages in California alone. Over 30 of the more traditional wet AD systems are also underway throughout the state, contributing to the approximately 200 throughout the country. Leading the way, Europe already has over 8,000 AD installations with as many as 25,000 planed by 2020 according to the German Biogas Association.

“We are grateful for the MRWMD, who has taken an innovate leadership role and helped bring this valuable, viable technology to the industry and the country”, said Eric Herbert, CEO of Zero Waste Energy. “We are confident that this will be the first of many SMARTFERM plants installed in the US over the next several years.

About Zero Waste Energy, LLC.

Zero Waste Energy, LLC (ZWE) is a global project developer utilizing patented anaerobic digestion (AD) technology and resource recovery processes to solve pressing problems in the waste industry throughout North America. The company—founded in 2009 by an experienced group of innovative solid waste industry leaders---designs, builds, and operates integrated solid waste facilities that efficiently optimize waste diversion and generate renewable energy in an environmentally sound manner. Collectively, ZWE’s management team has over 100 years of experience in solid waste, recycling, composting and biogas recovery. For more information on Zero Waste Energy, visit www.zerowasteenergy.com.

About Monterey Regional Waste Management District
Founded in 1951, The Monterey Regional Waste Management District (MRWMD) manages the solid waste stream from greater Monterey Peninsula region, an area of approximately 853 square miles and 170,000 residents and visitors. In 1996, the District’s services expanded to include operation of a Materials Recovery Facility diverting a wide range of materials including: glass, concrete, reusable building materials, sheetrock, metals, plastics, and resale items, among others. Recognized as an industry leader, the award-winning District is home to the Last Chance Mercantile reuse store, Household Hazardous Waste Collection Facility, Public Drop-off Recycling Center, Landfill Gas Renewable Energy Power Plant, Small Planet School Education Garden, and the Monterey Peninsula Landfill. Since 1983, the District has operated a landfill-gas-to-energy program that converts methane gas to renewable energy and presently produces 5 mW of electricity -- enough energy to fulfill its own energy needs with enough surplus power sold to the grid to power 4,000 local homes. For more information on the Monterey Regional Waste Management District, visit www.mrwmd.org.
Contact Information:

Ashley Beleny Environmental Relations PR (831)649-2334 [email protected]

Zero Waste Energy is an experienced and innovative provider of waste handling solutions dedicated to shifting the traditional perception of waste as an ever increasing cost to the recognition of trash as a valuable resource. As a result of a worldwide shortage of resources, the convergence of the so...

01/28/2013

Stop the Dump News

DEQ Chooses Defiance
by Susan Watkins
1/25/2013 8:09:57 PM

As reported here last week, the Stop the Dump Coalition asked DEQ and the Environmental Quality Commission (EQC), which runs DEQ, to utilize a magnitude 9.0 standard in evaluating Waste Management's request to build a 40-foot high wall on the Highway 18 side of the dump.

As you know, western Oregon is expecting to be hit by a Cascadia subduction zone earthquake that could strike at any time. Everybody--except DEQ--knows that this earthquake will be devastating.

Oregon will need landfill capacity following the Cascadia earthquake and tsunami, but Riverbend Landfill is more likely to be part of the problem than part of the solution.

Riverbend sits on the banks of the South Yamhill River. DOGAMI's "hazard vu" website shows the south half of the landfill (closest to the river) in the "severe" shaking zone. This includes portions of the oldest cells of the landfill, which date from the early 1980's and are unlined. We expect this part of the landfill to fail during an M9.0 quake, yet Waste Management, the landfill's owner, is asking DEQ to approve an expansion of capacity at the landfill--and DEQ wants to issue this permit.

The M9.0 standard was adopted over a year ago by the Oregon Seismic Safety Policy Advisory Committee (OSSPAC) and its member agencies, including DOGAMI (the state's seismic experts), ODOT, the state Office of Emergency Management, the Department of State Lands, and DLCD, for earthquake preparedness and recovery. But DEQ does not believe it is required to use that standard.

At a special EQC meeting on January 22, DEQ staff told the EQC that federal regulations allow landfills to be evaluated using only an 8.5 standard, and that Waste Management's engineering consultants have assured DEQ that the proposed expansion will satisfy that lower standard. DEQ made very clear to the Commission that it wants to act now to authorize the Landfill to expand its capacity.

Despite an appeal from State Geologist Vickie McConnell, chief of DOGAMI, that DEQ "consider" the magnitude 9.0 standard, the EQC acquiesced in staff's evaluation--without asking staff whether the M8.5 standard sufficiently protects Oregon resources or why DEQ stands alone in rejecting the likelihood of an M9.0 quake.

We are concerned that engineering to an magnitude 8.5 earthquake will not adequately protect the citizens, businesses, and natural resources of the State of Oregon.

According to Lissa Druback of DEQ, DEQ will be meeting with DOGAMI during the week of January 28th "to discuss what the recommendation in their January 16th letter to us means not only for the site specific seismic hazard analysis that has been completed for Riverbend Landfill [using the 8.5 standard] but also how the recommendation potentially impacts the design of all landfills that are subject to the Cascadia Subduction Zone Earthquake."

Ms. Druback informed us that her office will not make a decision on the Riverbend permit modification without first talking to DOGAMI. She also assured us that DEQ will report back to the EQC on the outcome of the discussion with DOGAMI.

As it turns out, federal standards do allow agencies discretion in adopting standards. Our attorney, Bill Kabeiseman of Garvey Schubert Barer in Portland, has prepared a Seismic Evaluation, which we will share with DEQ. The Evaluation makes clear that federal regs allow DEQ to use the standard that best protects Oregon and Oregonians.

Please contact DOGAMI and DEQ to let them know we want them to use the standard that protects us and our lands best! Contact me for a copy of DOGAMI's letter or attorney Kabeiseman's Seismic Evaluation.

08/28/2012

For two decades, fifth-generation farmer Ramsey McPhillips and a motley crew of neighbors have wa...

Address

McMinnville, OR

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Landfills Anonymous posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share