24
And Greenhouse Gases CO 2 CH 4 N 2 O Organic Waste Management

GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Palo Alto generates yard waste, food and compostable waste, and biosolids. The City is concerned with managing these waste streams in order to minimize GHG emissions and return organics to the biosphere.

Citation preview

Page 1: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

And Greenhouse Gases

CO2

CH4

N2OOrganic Waste Management

Page 2: GHG Impact of Organic Waste
Page 3: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Compost Pile1 ton Carbon => 3.6 Tons CO2

Carbon-rich organics

Soil-enriching compost

Page 4: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Incineration

CO2

H2O

CO

C

N2O

Page 5: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Anaerobic Decomposition

Carbon/Water to CO2Carbon/Water to CH4

Sequestered Carbon

Page 6: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Palo Alto Composting & CO2

• 21,000 tons/yr (60% water)• 8,400 tons dry, 50% Carbon

• Methane production is negligible • 15,120 tons of CO2

• Biogenic CO2, not counted in “footprint”

• Transportation Concerns: – 1,100 tons additional if trucked to Sunnyvale

then Gilroy– Anthropogenic, counted in “footprint”– Traffic impact; Roadway maintenance

Page 7: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

• Carbon Credit prices vary, but center around $20 / metric ton

• Added to costs of trucks, fuel, drivers, & acceptance fees.

What’s 1,100 Tons Worth?

$22,000 / year

Page 8: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

1,100 tons = + 0.15%

Page 9: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Landfilled Compostables

tons

tons

tons

Compostables are 29% of Palo Alto’s “black bin” waste.

22,737 Tons of

Page 10: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Modern Landfill Design

Page 11: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Palo Alto Food and Green Waste in Landfill

– 15,934 tons wet (60% water) – 2,692 tons of Carbon (40% of dry is carbon) – 1,346 tons Carbon released in 1st year

• 50% into CO2: 2,424 tons CO2

• 50% into CH4: 50,880 tons CO2 Equivalent

– 1,346 tons Carbon remaining

Page 12: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Palo Alto Landfilled Compostables, after Cap

• 1,346 tons Carbon from food/green waste carryforward• 2,457 tons Carbon from other compostables (based on 45%

carbon in dry weight)

• Total: 3,803 tons carbon• 70% decomposes (2662 tons carbon)

– 85% captured and combusted to CO2

• 8,146 tons of CO2

– 15% escapes capture• 719 tons CO2

• 15,099 tons CO2 Equivalent (methane)

Page 13: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Total GHG Emissions from Landfilled Compostables

• For one year’s waste: – 79,262 tons CO2 Equivalent !

• If diverted and composted:– 18,534 tons CO2

• Full diversion would reduce PA Carbon Footprint by 60,728 tons of CO2e! – 2.7 tons CO2e per ton food/yard waste

• (carbon credit value $54)

Page 14: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Single Family vs MF/C

• Greenwaste Palo Alto Target:– 9000 tons– (comm/mf)– $70/ton +/-

• 13,700 tons still going to landfill– 37,000 tons CO2e

Page 15: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Organics GHG Reduction

• Part of the Zero Waste Plan

• Execution of plan is what matters

• What we do matters more than where

• Attention, Measurement, Reporting, Evaluation, & Improvement

Page 16: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Organics GHG Reduction

#1

Move Aggressively on MF/Commercial Food Waste Collection! (& 3500 tons of leaves & grass)

(‘000s tons CO2e reduction)

Page 17: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Organics GHG Reduction

#2

Implement Residential Food Waste Collection!

(‘000s tons CO2e reduction)

Page 18: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

C

Organics GHG Reduction

#3Transform to BioChar/Bioenergy!

• All green bin contents = minus 7,000 tons CO2e

• 50% blackbin compostables = - 4500 tons CO2e

• Wastewater sludge = - 6,000 tons CO2e

CO2

CO2

Page 19: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Organics Management

PassiveCriteria:• lowest cost disposal

• diversion mandates

ActiveCriteria:• Resource recovery• GHG minimization• Long-term cost

?

Page 20: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Organics Management Passive Active

Palo AltoOperation

Multi-cityPartnership

Contracted

Location &Technology

Page 21: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Organics Management

Control

Economiesof Scale

City-Owned

Multi-City

Contracted

Page 22: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Multi-tech Organics Approach

Composting

Digestion

Soils Restoration

Sequestration

Green Energy

Green Bins

Wastewater

Black BinsPyrolysis

Page 23: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

Location Possibilities

• Expansion of WWTF• Industrial sites in

Palo Alto• Industrial sites

elsewhere• Energy/GHG

Efficiency tradeoff: – Large scale

operations vs – Local operations

Page 24: GHG Impact of Organic Waste

GHGs in Perspective

• Compost just a small piece of the opportunity

• What more important than where.

• Audit, execute, and improve.

• Regional partnership (we are not alone)