November - December 2009

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LFG and the Local Potential

Making landfill-gas energy work for communities with small landfills

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Photo: Valley Landfill

By Tom Frankiewicz

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Current onsite uses include leachate evaporation, building heating, and electrical generation, while examples of offsite use by nearby facilities include existing wastewater treatment facilities or municipal buildings or collocation of new facilities. Facilities that have been newly collocated at small landfills to utilize the LFG include artist centers, greenhouses, and aquaculture. Jackson County, North Carolina’s Green Energy Park taps LFG from a small landfill to provide energy, environmental, and financial benefits for the community.

Community creativity and the desire to use renewable energy resources and encourage economic development and environmental protection helped launch the Jackson County Green Energy Park. The Green Energy Park offers students, energy professionals, educators, and tourists the opportunity to experience LFG use as a fuel source. LFG is collected from the closed Jackson County Landfill in Dillsboro to meet the energy needs of artisan studios, greenhouses, and other ventures. The closed landfill contains about 750,000 tons of waste in place and supplies about 40 scfm to energy park facilities. LFG is the sole fuel source for several blacksmith studios located in the energy park, and the county is nearing completion of glass-blowing studios that will be fueled entirely by LFG. 

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“When using local tax dollars to finance a project, you have to find out what works in your community,” says Timm Muth, project manager for Jackson County. “You can’t build a craft facility everywhere, but here in Jackson County, tourism and recreation are the major industries.” In addition to the craft studios, LFG is used for heating a series of six greenhouses covering more than 7,000 square feet. The greenhouses are used to grow plants that are used in county landscaping projects as well as sold to local landscapers and large private developers.

Stan Steury, who was the project coordinator, sums up the significance of this project: “The efforts of EnergyXchange have done much for the LFG energy field: proved that LFG energy projects at small landfills can be beneficial; shown the power of partnerships; drawn nationwide attention to LFG energy; spawned development in neighboring areas; and become a model for other projects.”


Author's Bio: Tom Frankiewicz, works with the Landfill Methane Outreach Program.

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