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Pike County Ethanol Plant will turn Appalachian Garbage into Fuel

by Martin Richards last modified September-08-2008 09:28 AM
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The Pike Fiscal Court unanimously approved beginning negotiations with Agresti Biofuels, an Indiana-based company that is seeking to make the total investment in a plant that could produce 20 million gallons per year of fuel-grade ethanol from garbage.

The $200 million facility will be built on a 40-acre site on Ford Mountain, that is currently being mined and where the county’s landfill is located. Pike County  Judge Executive Wayne T. Rutherford  spoke about the project following the regular meeting of Fiscal Court. He was joined by Zig Resiak, an associate with Agresti. representatives from Oppenhiemer and the Royal Canadian Bank.Pike ethanol plant

Resiak explained the process which will turn garbage into fuel.  The first step is to separate the recyclables from the solid waste, which is done using a patented water sorting method. There will be no “pickers”, people who have to sort through the waste, it was explained, and so reducing odors from the plant.  Once sorted, the biomass will be sent to an underground  concrete enclosed vessel where it will be mixed with a very weak acid solution to be converted into sugars. The sugars will then be fermented and distilled into alcohol. The fermentation step produces carbon dioxide, which, instead of being released into the atmosphere, is funneled through a closed system and used to generate the weak acid that is required in the biomass conversion process. The type of plant proposed by Agresti generates about 800,000 gallons of clean water each month, and reuses its water. The facility, officials said, is “environmentally friendly.”

When fully operational, the Central Appalachian Ethanol Plant could process as much as 1,500 tons per day, and could accept garbage for processing from all counties in Eastern Kentucky, western Virginia and southern West Virginia. Pike County currently receives 400 tons of MSW each day. The Pike County hollow landfill is nearing capacity, and the government will not authorize the creation of any more landfills.

 According to Rutherford, the plant will cost $200 million to build, provide a projected $87.3 million in construction wages to the local economy and once constructed, create 120 jobs and $30 million in wages at full production. “Pike County could realize up to $750,000 in revenue per year, with a contract we’re negotiating,” Rutherford said. The income would come in the form of fuel-offset credits, carbon credits and recyclable materials.

To read more see the following articles:

Appalachian News Express http://www.news-expressky.com/articles/2008/08/20/top_story/01trash.txt

The Williamson (WVa.) Dailey News http://www.williamsondailynews.com/articles/2008/08/20/news/doc48ac5029060ed017296111.txt

and WYMT, including public comments, http://www.wkyt.com/wymtnews/headlines/27150479.html

wow...

Posted by Caitlin at August-26-2008 06:45 PM
This sounds like a really good deal. Almost too good to be true!

One of the reasons why I love going green is that it also saves money. This looks to be no exception. Hopefully, it'll be a success and inspire other communities to do the same!

I do wish they provided more jobs, though.

More!

Posted by Richard at August-27-2008 10:19 AM
Once they are forced to consider these alternatives, local governments begin to really evaluate the arguments on their merits, instead of going along with the inertial status quo. I am so glad that Pike County is even considering this step, especially since spillover benefits will include surrounding counties having a place to tip their garbage, and reduced need for imported foreign and domestic ethanol to meet KY's federally-imposed ethanol requirement.

Martin County Garbage Burning

Posted by Bill Smith at October-01-2008 04:14 PM
KFTC needs to look at what is going on in Martin County with Recycling Solutions/DFM, Inc. They want to burn garbage to generate electricity. This is the worse thing to do. They pollute the air with mercury and lead and other pollution.

KFTC rescue us from this danger!

More information please

Posted by martin at October-01-2008 09:33 PM
Can you send me more information - martin@kftc.org? I have done a web search for Recycling Solutions/DFM and have gotten nothing.