Baltimore Sun

Where trash will end up is uncertain

Baltimore and surroundin­g counties seek alternativ­es if city incinerato­r closes

- By Scott Dance

After the Baltimore City Council passed clean-air legislatio­n Monday that could force a large trash incinerato­r to shut down, officials in the city and surroundin­g counties began considerin­g how to dispose of their garbage if they are no longer able to burn it.

The Wheelabrat­or Baltimore waste-toenergy plant near Russell Street and Interstate 95 processes more than 700,000 tons of trash every year — about half of that trash comes from Baltimore households and nearly 40 percent from Baltimore County. The rest comes from Howard and Anne Arundel counties, other Maryland jurisdicti­ons and out of state.

While supporters of the city’s Clean Air Act say the ultimate goal is to reduce waste, the Wheelabrat­or incinerato­r’s closure would create new and unpredicta­ble pressures on area landfills.

Mayor Catherine Pugh said the city is exploring expanding its Quarantine Road landfill, but added that officials also would have to get creative to process and reduce the waste stream.

“We’re going to have to move our communitie­s into composting and other methods of taking care of our own waste,” Pugh said. “There are other technologi­es

that are being prepared. Some of them won’t be ready in time for this, but we will have to figure it out.”

The Baltimore City Council legislatio­n would impose stringent air pollution limits on the Wheelabrat­or plant and Curtis Bay Energy, a large medical waste incinerato­r, starting in 2022. Wheelabrat­or officials have said it would be impossible to retrofit their facility to meet the air standards, and that only a brand new waste-to-energy plant could comply with the ordinance, which Pugh said she intends to sign.

The Quarantine Road landfill in South Baltimore’s Hawkins Point and Baltimore County’s White Marsh landfill could be impacted most if the 34-year-old Wheelabrat­or plant closes.

The Quarantine landfill is about 82 percent full and on track to reach capacity in 2026. But that’s assuming the waste stream doesn’t change and maintains its current pace. The landfill mostly receives ash from the incinerato­r.

In 2017, the Wheelabrat­or facility produced about 200,000 tons of ash, about 70 percent of which went to the Quarantine Road landfill and 30 percent to Baltimore County’s Eastern Sanitary landfill, according to the Maryland Department of the Environmen­t.

Baltimore Public Works Director Rudy Chow called a meeting Tuesday and asked his staff to begin gathering informatio­n about the impact of Wheelabrat­or’s potential closure, and about the city’s waste disposal options, spokesman Jeffrey Raymond said.

“We are looking at pressures on our landfill at Quarantine Road and the best ways to respond,” Raymond said. “We’ll be looking at that in the days and weeks ahead.”

Meanwhile, the department is just starting to develop a plan to guide the city’s waste disposal through 2040. It will take input from residents at a series of public meetings, two of which have been scheduled for Feb. 28 and March 11.

Baltimore County spokesman T.J. Smith said the county would divert trash it sends to Wheelabrat­or — about 280,000 tons in 2017 — to the Eastern Sanitary Landfill where it dumps the rest of its trash. The landfill is about 54 percent to capacity, according to state data.

County officials are working to develop “a long-term cost-effective solution,” Smith said.

“We are involved in multiple conversati­ons about long term strategies,” he said in an e-mail.

About 2 percent of the trash Wheelabrat­or burned in 2017 came from Howard County. The county government does not send household waste there, but some commercial haulers do, County Executive Calvin Ball said in a statement.

Nonetheles­s, Ball said the incinerato­r’s closure could force some adjustment­s to the county’s waste disposal plans.

“The loss of the Wheelabrat­or will be a challenge,” Ball said. “We will collaborat­e with our neighborin­g jurisdicti­ons, evaluate our options, and embrace environmen­tally friendly practices towards holistic waste management efforts that will also increase our recycling and composting rates.”

About 3 percent of the garbage burned at the incinerato­r in 2017 came from Anne Arundel. County officials said they don’t send any household waste there, and suggested it came from private haulers. The county’s only active landfill is not projected to fill to capacity until 2060, they said.

The rest of the waste Wheelabrat­or processes comes in small amounts from St. Mary's, Montgomery and Prince George's counties, and from states including Delaware, Pennsylvan­ia, North Carolina and West Virginia.

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