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Turninj trash into gas helps planet, poctbook I Recordnet.com r~M Page 1 of 2 <br />News <br />TURNING TRASH INTO GAS HELPS PLANET, POCKETBOOK <br />TWO S.J. LANDFILLS PREPARE TO FIRE UP POWER PLANTS <br />By Alex Breitler <br />October 06, 2013 <br />Record Staff Writer <br />When most San Joaquin County residents take out the trash, they'll also soon be turning on the lights across <br />Northern California. <br />Two major local landfills - one private, the other operated by the county - are within months of finishing new power <br />plants that will take harmful methane gas created by the decomposition of garbage and convert it into electricity. <br />The plant at privately owned Forward Landfill southeast of Stockton will have a capacity of greater than 4.3 <br />megawatts, enough to power about 4,380 average homes at any one time. <br />The other plant, at the county's Foothill Landfill near Linden, weighs in at 3.5 megawatts - roughly enough to power <br />a city the size of Lathrop. <br />The projects were described as helping planet and pocketbook <br />"Certainly, from an environmental perspective, we want to make sure we capture all the methane and use it in a <br />resourceful way," said Kevin Basso, general manager of landfill owner Allied Waste. "And it makes sense <br />economically." <br />Both landfills have entered into long-term agreements with the Massachusetts-based renewable energy company <br />Ameresco, which is building the plants and will pay for the rights to the gas. <br />The power generated by Forward will go to Pacific Gas and Electric Co., while the county's power will go to the city <br />of Palo Alto, which has its own electrical utility. <br />Desi Reno, the county's solid -waste manager, said he expects revenue from the power to generate an extra <br />$600,000 to $900,000 per year to help pay for future waste needs in the county. <br />"It'll work out great," Reno said. <br />Most local residents produce trash that ultimately goes to Forward or Foothill. Lodi sends trash to the North County <br />Landfill, however, which is not yet large enough to produce enough gas to justify a power plant there, Reno said. <br />Trash produces gas as it slowly decomposes in landfills. About half of that gas is methane, a greenhouse gas that <br />is 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Landfills are the third-largest source of methane in the United States. <br />Rather than allowing methane to seep into the air, both landfills already collect the gas and burn it off in large <br />flares. <br />The new power plants will allow them to put at least some of that gas to better use. <br />Some critics of landfill -based gas power plants in general have suggested such projects conflict with the goal of <br />reducing the amount of garbage we dispose of in the first place. The Environmental Protection Agency, however, <br />has said there is no conflict, because landfill power plants allow us to make something good out of the trash that <br />has already been discarded while still striving to discard less overall. <br />The agency said there are already 621 landfill power plants in production in the country, including 78 in California. <br />http://www.recordnet.comlappslpbcs.dll/article?AID=1201310061A NEWS/310060315&emailAFriend... 10/21/2013 <br />