The MSW Management Blogs

The Blogger

John Trotti MSW Management Editor

More from this blogger

  1. Crude Thoughts Revisited
  2. Prepping for Change
  3. Building on Your Staff's Strengths
  4. It Always Helps to Know Where You Are
  5. WASTECON August 15-17 Boston
  6. What to Do With the Glop From the Gulf
  7. The Curse of Stranded Investment
  8. Complacency Our Constant Companion
  9. Meeting Long Neglected Societal Needs
  10. Why Are We Here
  11. Waste Expo 2010 Report
  12. WasteExpo Time Again
  13. CTs on the Verge in CA
  14. Landfill Financial Responsibility
  15. Producer Responsibility Marketplace or Mandate
  16. Producer Responsibility
  17. We're Not Alone
  18. SWANA Landfill Gas Symposium 2010
  19. Is Greenwash as Bad as Hogwash
  20. Recycling Accountability
  21. An Antidote to Chaos
  22. Give Free Enterprise a Chance
  23. A Need for Concerted Action
  24. Changes to the Stream
  25. LMOP 2010 40 CFM and Up
  26. MSW as a Security Resource
  27. LMOP Becomes a Teenager
  28. The Changing Landscape of Collection and Transfer Operations
  29. Into the New Year
  30. Every Litter Bit Hurts
  31. Messages From Beyond the Van Allen Belt
  32. It's Not Just a Job; It's an Adventure
  33. Raising the Titanic
  34. How are they doing it
  35. Preparing for the Next Round of Diversion
  36. It's Time to Fall Back
  37. A Pretty Good Storm
  38. Coping With the Change
  39. More on Conversion Technologies
  40. WASTECON 2009 Sustainability and Other Pickens
  41. WASTECON 2009
  42. Up From the Ashes
  43. MSW Training Courses
  44. How's Your 2020 Vision
  45. Bypassing Irreconcilable Differences
  46. EPA's Materials Management Challenge
  47. Waste No More
  48. MSW and Recycling Web-Based Training for New Staff
  49. Green Side Out
  50. Sustainability Product Index
  51. WASTECON and Your Waste Board
  52. Technology and Waste
  53. Show Me the Markets
  54. Lean Thinking
  55. Rabbit from the Hat Waste Expo 2009
  56. Some Things Just Take Time
  57. How Are We Going to Pay the Bill
  58. Cases for and Against Going to Waste Expo 2009
  59. Back to Back We Face the Past
  60. Do Sacred Cows Belong in the Wastestream
  61. Where's Howard Beale When We Need Him
  62. Sequestering...Again
  63. Safety on the Worksite
  64. Landfill Futures
  65. Renewable Electricity Production Tax Credit
  66. A Climate Change at the Sierra Club
  67. Don't Forget the Debrief
  68. Landfill Gas Collection System Efficiencies
  69. Lessons From the Construction Folks
  70. Paperless iMSW Management-i
  71. Dealing with Stranded Investment
  72. GHGs on My Mind
  73. Is the Hierarchy of the 1980s Relevant Today
  74. Back to the Idea of Sequestration
  75. Sustainability in the Face of Shrunken Budgets
  76. Student Public Service
  77. Web Based Training
  78. Are We Wasting an Opportunity
  79. Energy Efficiency, Climate Protection, and MSW Management
  80. Managing Disaster-Generated Waste and Debris
  81. Southern California Fires
  82. When Do Throw-Aways Become Recyclables
  83. Got a Few Minutes to Spare
  84. Classroom Time
  85. How Much Carbon in a Dollar
  86. Waste In the Eye of the Storm
  87. Once More Into the Breech
  88. Rules For a New Ball Game
  89. An Environmental Case for Running a Tight Ship
  90. Feel-Good Environmentalism The Smog Pump Approach to Waste Diversion
  91. Feel-Good Environmentalism
  92. Technology, Trash, and Our Workforce of the Future
  93. A World Lit by More Than Fire
  94. An End to Outsourcing
  95. What's Your Tolerance for Drug and Alcohol Abuse
  96. Why an MSW Management Newsletter
  97. Welcome to the New Site!
view all

MSW Editor's Blog

March 17th, 2009 7:10am PST

Landfill Gas Futures

Posted By John Trotti Comments
 I spent this past week in Atlanta at SWANA’s Landfill Gas Symposium, talking with attendees and exhibitors alike (both categories record-setting in their numbers), taking in the presentations, and trying not to get trampled by the hordes of Southeastern Conference (basketball) Championship fans running amok in the downtown area. I came through unscathed, which in retrospect had some miraculous aspects, but my survival allows me the opportunity to offer a short report on the symposium…not the results of the tournament.

As with LMOP earlier in the year  the overall mood of the event was extremely positive…and why not? Even with energy prices back to where they were three years ago, between the expectation of huge infusions of money for LFGTE projects from private as well as public coffers and the entirely reasonable expectation that today’s energy prices will prove to be ephemeral, everyone with whom I spoke looked forward eagerly to what 2009 had to offer. Well, nearly everyone.

Greg Vogt, managing director for the International Solid Waste Association (ISWA), headquartered in Vienna, Austria, led off the festivities with his keynote presentation titled, Trends Counter to Landfill Gas Industry Growth, pointing out that around the globe, landfills were running into increasingly heavy flak. It’s one thing for Western European nations—the core of ISWA membership and concern where space is a major consideration—to oppose the practice, but here in the US we find landfilling coming under increasing siege by individuals and organizations of different and often contradictory stripes.

Was Director Vogt—long a colleague and friend of many if not most of the people in the audience—proclaiming opposition to landfilling in general and LFGTE in particular? I think not. Rather he was sounding a warning bell to landfill supporters who have sat back and allowed landfill critics to demonize the practice without a fight that it’s time to enter the fray with science-based information of their own.

Some might not have appreciated Vogt’s setting the event in motion on such a cautionary note, but the message was well founded by a man whose credentials and intentions are without question.

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get MSW Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our MSW email newsletter!