Firm Wins SC State Approval to Build $12M Organic Waste-to-Energy Plant

Date: January 20, 2011

Source: News Room

A Columbia, SC-based firm has received a permit to proceed with construction of a planned $12 million biowaste-to-energy facility in the city. The company, called W2E, is headed by Daniel Rickenmann, a Columbia City Councilman and a former restaurateur said his plant will process organic waste such as food, grease, produce and yard clippings into natural gas for electric power production. The plant will also produce a soil additive and compost as a byproduct. Rickenmann said his company has commitments from a variety of commercial waste streams including Wal-Mart, BlueCross and BlueShield of South Carolina, Palmetto Health and the State Farmers Market. He expects the plant to be operational next year and that it will serve as a prototype for similar digesters in six other cities such as Gastonia, NC and Baton Rouge, LA. W2E is partnering with the German firm EISENMANN, which will build the plant.

To learn more, visit: waste2energynow.com.

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