Hidden power: Sydney dump to turn plastic into fuel

Hidden power: Sydney dump to turn plastic into fuel

A new recycling factory in Sydney will turn a quarter of a million tonnes of garbage into fuel every year, replacing 100,000 tonnes of coal power and taking the equivalent of 20,000 cars off the road. The facility in Wetherill Park, in Sydney’s west, co-owned by waste companies Cleanaway and ResourceCo, will turn non-recyclable waste into a fuel.

It works by taking dry waste such as plastic, dirty paper and cardboard, and non-recyclable wood and turning it into small solid material - known as processed engineered fuel (PEF) - that can be burnt for power.

Electricity generator EnergyAustralia is currently trialling a similar project repurposing waste alongside its Mt Piper coal-fired power plant outside Lithgow in NSW. EnergyAustralia’s energy recovery process can generate about 27 megawatts, or power to about 40,000 homes, solely through using garbage as a fuel source.

See https://www.smh.com.au/environment/sustainability/hidden-power-sydney-dump-to-turn-plastic-into-fuel-20180730-p4zuga.html

Hidden power: Sydney dump to turn plastic into fuel
A recycling factory in Sydney will turn garbage into fuel, replacing 100,000 tonnes of coal power and taking the equivalent of 20,000 cars off the road.


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