June 2009

Green in Demand

A growing number of cities and towns are seeking to boost their green status by diverting waste from landfills and turning it into green products. This growing market has helped offset some of the decline from the slumping housing industry.

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Photo: CWQ Mill

By Dan Rafter

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The city also sells its greenwaste to avocado growers, tomato growers, and a large trucking firm that runs its own composting facility.

“We started small with our green waste, but now we are diversifying,” Armstrong says. “We now make from 15 to 20 different products.”

The Growing Demand for Biomass
Business has been strong for Flowery Branch, GA–based FAE USA, a manufacturer of mulching, rock-crushing, and soil-stabilizing equipment. Wes Hall, the company’s territory manager for the Southeast region, cites a growing demand for biomass as one reason.

Biomass is especially in demand at facilities that rely on onsite cogeneration systems to power part or all of their operations, he says.

“We are seeing a lot of growth and more talk of biomass now,” Hall says. “There are plans to build biomass plants right here in Georgia. This is definitely a market that is growing today.”

The biomass market is strong enough that FAE USA is now developing a new product designed specifically to help contractors and waste haulers participate in it, says Giorgio Carera, chief executive officer of the company.

The new biomass collector, which is still in development and has not yet been named, would work best in tandem with other shredding or mulching equipment, Carera says. Operators, for instance, could clear trees or shrubs from an area with one of FAE USA’s mulching machines. They could then run the biomass collector over the area to quickly pick up the mulch.

Operators would be able to download the mulch into a trailer or any other location, Carera says. FAE USA plans to debut this new product in the United States by the end of the summer, according to Carera.

The biomass market has the potential to be a lucrative one for private contractors and the manufacturers who make the equipment serving them, Hall says. And it’s a field that he says will become more crowded in the near future.

“This is an important market for us,” Hall says. “People might not remember, but the price of fuel was very high very recently. That has helped spur the drive for more biofuels. We’re looking for alternatives to our traditional fossil fuels, and biofuels might be the solution. I think we’ll see a lot of interest in this field. Everyone is looking for a way to get into something that they can make a lot of money doing. Something new like biomass can put a lot of work on the table for today’s contractors. It’s a new field, and we really don’t know yet just how big it’s going to get.”

As states and the federal government both encourage municipalities to divert more waste from landfills—waste that solid waste districts usually recycle, turn into compost or convert into biomass—they are helping to increase the business at manufacturers such as FAE USA, Hall says.

After all, contractors and municipal solid waste officials can’t grind up their wastestreams without the grinders, mulchers, and composting equipment that these manufacturers produce.

This can be seen in the eclectic client list that FAE USA enjoys. The company serves everyone from grading and excavating contractors to agriculture companies to specialized forestry clients, Hall says.

“The green initiative we are seeing in this country now is a great help to our industry,” he explains. “The more push we get from the government to go green, the more the contractors are going to respond to it.”

Handling the Mix
With its five rotary-drum in-vessel composting system supplied by A-C Equipment Services of Milwaukee, WI, Sevier Solid Waste Inc. (SSWI) at Sevierville, TN, operates the largest mixed solid waste composting facility in the US, capable of processing 375 tons per day of a combination of MSW and sewage sludge.

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SSWI opened the facility in 1992 with three digesters, adding a fourth digester in 1996 and then investing in two additional rotary drums in 2006—one as a replacement for digester no. 3—and one to increase the throughput potential of the operation.

“The original three units had doors separating the material that had to be manually opened and closed,” says SSWI’s Tom Leonard, who has been with the project since 1999, “but when the new units were installed, A-C Equipment refurbished the remaining units, bringing them up to the latest spec.” Next Page >

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