County incinerator no longer adds up
The Post and Courier
Friday, February 1, 2008
Mic Smith The Post and Courier
Bill Kozak, an ash loader operator, for Montenay Charleston Resource Recovery commonly known at the Charleston County incinerator, cleans up around the ash recovery area Thursday. The incinerator will probably be closing in a couple of years.
Mic Smith The Post and Courier
View of the Charleston County incinerator.
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In a move that affects how 330,000 residents get rid of their trash, Charleston County plans to shut its garbage incinerator in 2010 and rely instead on its Bees Ferry Road landfill and a future dump near Adams Run. County Council's decision reshuffles how cities and public service districts collect and dispose of garbage, possibly increasing costs for some municipalities, especially those east of the Cooper River. The incinerator, built in the late 1980s, converts 230,000 tons of trash a year, or 80 percent of the county's garbage, into smoke, steam and a thick black ash. When running at full bore, its generators pump enough electricity into the power grid to light 7,000 to 10,000 homes. The plant, on Shipyard Creek Road in North Charleston, also is one of the state's biggest sources of mercury pollution, releasing about 129 pounds a year, more than some of the state's larger coal-fired power plants and twice as much as Nucor's smelter in Berkeley County, state records show. Municipal incinerators across the country have come under increasing fire for emitting dioxin and other cancer-causing pollutants. After crunching the numbers and reviewing three other options, County Council voted unanimously last week to stop using the incinerator at the end of 2009. "It's a significant change in county policy and practices," Chairman Tim Scott said. The county is paying Montenay Charleston Resource Recovery $446,500 to run the incinerator until 2010. Starting in January 2010, about 65 to 75 garbage trucks that normally would unload at the incinerator would head to the Bees Ferry landfill on the western edge of Charleston. All household and municipal waste would go there until the dump fills up, which is expected to happen in 2024. A new landfill would then be developed off U.S. Highway 17 near Adams Run. The county owns the land for the new dump but has not built it. The county's decision caught some town officials by surprise. "It snuck up on us a little," said Mac Burdette, Mount Pleasant's town administrator. "It's definitely going to have an impact on us, and I wish they would have involved the stakeholders a little more." Mount Pleasant, Isle of Palms and Sullivan's Island will feel the incinerator's closure the most because it will force these municipalities to send their trucks across the county instead of to the more centrally located incinerator. That will add wear and tear on trucks, Burdette said. Crews will spend more time in traffic instead of collecting garbage from curbs, possibly forcing the town to add employees. Burdette said the town recently hired a consultant to estimate the impact. "It's going to cost us some money," he said of the county's move. While municipalities weigh the effects of life without trash incineration, conservationists cheered the county's decision. "It's good news," said Nancy Vinson of the Coastal Conservation League. The incinerator's technology is old and dirty, and its mercury emissions are among the worst in South Carolina, she said. Mercury is a potent neurotoxin linked to birth defects and other health problems. A recent series by The Post and Courier showed how some of the state's worst mercury polluters, including the incinerator, are in and around the Charleston metro area. Incinerators in some states have come under fire for their mercury emissions, especially in Florida. A recent study found that when these plants were closed or they reduced mercury emissions, mercury levels in wildlife and fish went down. Vinson said the incinerator's pending closure still raises questions about how county residents can dispose of items such as thermometers, batteries and compact fluorescent bulbs, all of which usually contain mercury and other heavy metals. She also wondered how it would affect the lifespans of the county's landfills. To extend the lives of the landfills, the county plans to stop accepting construction and demolition waste from private haulers and contractors after June. County officials said private vegetative and construction material can instead be dumped at private facilities, including the Fennell Container Co. operation in North Charleston. Scott said that by limiting the amount of waste pouring into the dumps, the county could continue landfilling for about 37 years. He said the county eventually will build a transfer station — a centrally located place where municipalities can dump garbage and larger trucks can haul it to landfills in western Charleston County. "It'd be nice to have a transfer station somewhere in Mount Pleasant," Scott said. Solid Waste Director Gregg Varner said the county might be able to convert the incinerator plant into a transfer station. But that's to be decided, he said. Charleston County owns the land, but AT&T Credit Corp. owns the facility and Montenay runs daily operations. Plant manager Lee Bazzle said Montenay hasn't ruled out privately operating the incinerator. "We're just regrouping right now," Bazzle said. Carolina Power & Light Co. pays the county about $4 million a year for the incinerator's electricity. "All of that was considered," Varner said. "The financial analysis still proved out that the landfill option was less expensive over the 20 year planning period."
Reach Tony Bartelme at tbartelme@postandcourier.com or 937-5554. Reach Tenisha Waldo at 937-5744 or twaldo@postandcourier.com.
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Posted by Pluffmuddy on February 1, 2008 at 8:06 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The simple solution to East-of-the-Cooper's trash is to develop a landfill site at the northeastern end of the county. It makes no sense to truck their waste 40 miles to Adam's Run in the southeastern end...duh! Savings in fuel, manhours, and wear-and-tear on vehicles and roads should just about cover it.
Posted by Early on February 1, 2008 at 8:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)
And yet another decision by the local government without thinking of the consequences of their actions. Bees Ferry is a two lane road heavily traveled with new developments taking place and you want to add more trucks on the road without thinking of the impact. The Long Savannah Park purchase boarders the area around the Bees ferry land fill so we are going to expand the dump right near the expensive park you and I just bought, brilliant. Gas to go up to $4 a gallon and now we will truck twice as far and even further if they go to Adams Run. Let’s do the math; let’s conservatively say each truck burns 20 gallons more a day at $4 a gallon times 65 trucks, That comes to $5,200 a day and they run 6 days a week, 312 days a year comes to a total of $1,622,400 EXTRA per year plus the extra wear and tear on the vehicles, the extra carbon monoxide emissions and possibly building a station east of the Cooper. Lower education even shows up in our local government.
Posted by rmsems on February 1, 2008 at 8:25 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Early -- you forgot the wear and tear on the roads as well.
Posted by charlestonian on February 1, 2008 at 9:01 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The simple solution to the east of the coopers problems is to build a dump over there. But we all know that would never happen.
Posted by BillytheKid on February 1, 2008 at 9:07 a.m. (Suggest removal)
We have to get better at recycling. I have just started and the reason being is I think there is something to the global warming that is a buzz in the scientist mind but if you ask a Republican they will tell you it is nothing to worry about.
Posted by Early on February 1, 2008 at 9:14 a.m. (Suggest removal)
PM, good point on the cost to build and the life expectancy of the incinerator. We who live out that way call it trash ferry road.
Posted by n4dhs on February 1, 2008 at 10:52 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I am a republican myself and truly believe in recycling too but enough about Global Warming already - if the Dems are so great how come they didn't do anything about this before - and let me tell you this - if a volcano goes off you will be praying for Global Warming - I tried to buy a hybrid car back in '05 and was told that I had to pay an extra 8K for the privilege of owning one - even though I am a W fan I assumed he was the one that had set that up - but guess what? - it was our wonderful past President Clinton....I would buy a hybrid in a heart beat - but the GOP arent the big bad wolf here people....
Posted by lowcntryman on February 1, 2008 at 12:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)
It will be interesting to see how Mayor Riley reacts to this. The city has a vested interest in the success of the Long Savannah project. This has to have a significant impact on that project, and the development of the Stokes Tract. Good points Early. Also increased emissions from other power sources. If my info is right, the incinerator also produced power. If it's not there, the power has to come from somewhere else.
Posted by icbmman on February 1, 2008 at 4:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Don't worry lowcntryman, the city doesn't think it should even have decent lighting on the streets, so they'll just shut all street lighting off to make up for this boneheaded idea. It seems that all governments are regressing in ideas, creativity, and foresightedness.
Posted by Girleygirl on February 1, 2008 at 5:01 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Now you all know that they wanted to widen the roads on John's Island anyway so now they have a perfect reason why the roads should be changed to a 4 way hwy.
Posted by lexylady on February 1, 2008 at 6 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Why not use The beach in Wild Dunes to dump the garbage in.
We would then be doing our part to build up the beach, right? Then when it is built up high enough, throw some sand on it. It might even last a year or two..lol
Posted by zoomru on April 22, 2008 at 8:35 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Shazam ..PEOPLE!!!
STARTECH.NET
or Google "Joseph Longo"
I smell a land grab at taxpayers expense!!