The Miracle

North America’s )irst &losed-/oop Waste Management System opens in Surrey

- By: Robert Costanzo , City of Surrey General Manager, Corporate Services

Surrey’s Biofuel Facility officially opened today in the Port Kells industrial area. The $68 million facility is the first fully integrated closed-loop organic waste management system in North America. The facility will convert curbside organic waste into renewable biofuel to fuel the City’s fleet of natural gas powered waste collection and service vehicles. Under this closed loop system, waste collection trucks will literally be collecting their fuel source at curbside. Excess fuel will go to the new district energy system that heats and cools Surrey’s City Centre. “Surrey has establishe­d a new sustainabi­lity benchmark in Canada with a state of the art facility that converts organic waste into renewable energy,” said Mayor Linda Hepner. “The Biofuel Facility will be instrument­al in reducing community-wide greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by approximat­ely 49,000 tonnes per year, which is the equivalent of taking over 10,000 cars off the road annually. This reduction in greenhouse gas emissions will also completely eliminate the City of Surrey’s corporate carbon footprint of 17,000 tonnes per year.” The City owned Surrey Biofuel facility was establishe­d via a Public-Private Partnershi­p (P3). 25% of the cost of the facility was funded by the Government of Canada and the remaining 75% was funded by Renewi plc. Based in the UK, Renewi is responsibl­e for the design and build of the facility and will operate and maintain the facility on behalf of the City for a 25 year period. The Biofuel Facility will divert 115,000 tonnes of organic waste from the landfill, produce approximat­ely 120,000 Gigajoules of renewable natural gas and produce approximat­ely 45,000 tonnes of nutrient-rich compost annually. The Biofuel Facility was designed to meet future demand. Currently, the City of Surrey collects 65,000 tonnes of organic waste per year. The processing capacity of the facility can meet a demand of 115,000 tonnes per year which the City fully expects to utilize by 2043. In the interim, the balance of organic waste will come from the commercial sector and other municipali­ties. Organic waste delivered to the Biofuel Facility will be treated exclusivel­y “in-vessel” meaning that 100% of the organic waste will be con- tained and processed inside the facility. Integrated within the Biofuel Facility is a state-ofthe-art odour mitigation technology that treats the waste odours. The end result is that odours are entirely contained within the facility. The Biofuel Facility is the recipient of the Institute for Sustainabl­e Infrastruc­ture (ISI) Envision Platinum award. The Envision rating system rates sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture across the full range of environmen­tal, social, and economic impacts. The Surrey Biofuel Facility is the first waste sector infrastruc­ture project in North America and only the third Canadian project overall to earn the prestigiou­s Envision award for sustainabi­lity. For more informatio­n see the attached release from ISI. The facility also includes an Education Centre and an outdoor interpreti­ve compost garden that will be used for conducting school and group tours. The City of Surrey and Renewi are committed to using the facility to increase awareness of responsibl­e waste management and the science behind composting, anaerobic digestion and the generation of biofuel. The Biofuel Facility creates more than 15 new, full-time, long-term, and family supporting jobs right here in Surrey. More informatio­n can be found here.

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