Waste Management is Building a 4.8 MW Landfill Gas Project in Ohio

Date: May 11, 2012

Source: Waste Management, Inc.

Waste Management, Inc. (Houston, TX) has begun constructing a 4.8 megawatt landfill gas-to-energy project at its Mahoning Landfill in New Springfield, OH. Once completed by the end of the year, it will produce enough electricity to power 3,500 homes. Waste Management owns or operates over 130 landfill gas-to-energy facilities in North America which collectively create enough energy to power 1.1 million homes. The company hopes to double that amount by 2020.


PRESS RELEASE
May 11, 2012

Waste Management Mahoning Landfill to produce Green Energy from everyday waste

Green energy will soon be helping to power homes, following Waste Management's announcement today on the groundbreaking of a gas-to-electric facility at Mahoning Landfill in New Springfield, Ohio.

Once construction is completed, Waste Management Mahoning Landfill is designed to generate 4.8 megawatts of electricity, enough to power over 3,500 homes. The plant will be operational by the end of this year.

Methane gas, which is produced in the landfill from the decomposition of waste, will be channeled into engines that are used to create electricity. The electricity generated at Waste Management Mahoning Landfill will go into the electrical power grid.

"Creating this facility ensures that the waste we generate will be converted into a beneficial use," said Jerry Ross, Senior District Manager of Waste Management Mahoning Landfill. "By investing in landfill-gas-to-energy, we are developing renewable 'green' energy to power homes."

The U.S. EPA has endorsed landfill gas as an environmentally friendly resource that reduces reliance on coal, oil and other fossil fuels. Like wind and solar power, landfill gas is a resource that can be harnessed to produce energy and has many benefits and advantages compared to fossil fuels and other alternative energy sources.

Waste Management owns or operates over 130 landfill gas-to-energy facilities in North America. Waste Management pioneered landfill-gas-to-energy technology over two decades ago and operates more facilities than any other company in the United States.

In 2007, Waste Management announced four sustainability goals, which included increasing the amount of waste-based energy produced. Currently, the company creates enough energy to power 1.1 million homes, and it is looking to double to reach two million by 2020. Mahoning Landfill is a big step in accomplishing this goal and represents another source of renewable energy. Waste Management is the leading provider of integrated waste management services and one of the largest residential recyclers in North America.

Sign up to receive our free Weekly News Bulletin