Biomass waste disposal project proposed.A CTV CTV Canadian Television (Network Limited) W5 television program six years ago changed Roger Dolyny's life. The program examined how a Detroit suburb effectively handled waste with minimal environmental impact, compared to how Canadian municipalities handle it. After viewing the program, Dolyny, a longtime Fort Frances Fort Frances, town (1991 pop. 8,891), SW Ont., Canada, on Rainy River, opposite International Falls, Minn. It is chiefly a lumbering center with sawmills and a pulp and paper factory. Tourism is also an important industry, with abundant fishing and hunting nearby. general contractor A general contractor is an organization or individual that contracts with another organization or individual (the owner) for the construction of a building, road or any other execution of work or facility. , launched an eight-month personal study on waste handling. Dolyny is now a consultant to the Township of Emo Emo Emotion(s) EMO Emotional (music genre) EMO Emergency Measures Organization (Canada) EMO Evolutionary Multi-Objective Optimization EMO Emotional Rock , which is looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. a "proven" waste handling system. Dolyny quickly became a disciple of the way waste is handled at Riverview, Mich., where waste is dumped into five- or six-acre plots called cells and the methane gas is kept from seeping seep intr.v. seeped, seep·ing, seeps 1. To pass slowly through small openings or pores; ooze. 2. To enter, depart, or become diffused gradually. n. 1. into the environment. These cells have 10-foot clay walls that have thick plastic liners, and a bed of piping is laid in the cell for the extraction of methane gas, Dolyny says. The entire cell is covered with a four-inch-thick material. The cover is partially removed during the day for the dumping of waste, and at the end of the day the cover is replaced, trapping the methane gas that is eventually extracted, cleaned and sold. When the site is full, it is sealed. Gary Judson, an Emo councillor who chairs the township's biomass waste recovery committee, says "the township is looking for a proven successful method of handling waste." "We're in the second phase of a three-phase project," Judson says. The first phase was the investigation of options. The second phase is to gain government assistance, through funding, to conduct a full-scale operational analysis that will include water and soil testing, a complete environmental impact study and an economic sizing study with operational cost projections for a biomass waste disposal and recovery operation. Judson says the township has applied for FedNor funding to pay for the second phase. The Emo project has garnered interest from other townships in the area as well, adds Judson. In early November 2001 representatives from Emo, three other townships and the Rainy River Rainy River can refer to:
If the township proceeds with the development of a system similar to the one at Riverview, it would need to import waste from the surrounding area, possibly from the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . Nearby International Falls ships its waste 185 miles to North Dakota North Dakota, state in the N central United States. It is bordered by Minnesota, across the Red River of the North (E), South Dakota (S), Montana (W), and the Canadian provinces of Saskatchewan and Manitoba (N). . Dolyny says Emo has many attributes that make it attractive for the establishment of a biomass waste disposal and recovery operation, including the fact it is geophysically suited for such an operation. "(The land) has a clay base, it is in close proximity to the United States and it has rail lines," Dolyny says. Dolyny says establishing a biomass operation is a long-term project. "It takes anywhere from four to six years to recover methane gas," he says. During his study Dolyny learned that the "standard Canadian dump is spewing uncontrolled amounts of methane into the atmosphere, which is a leading contributor to the growing problem of greenhouse gas greenhouse gas n. Any of the atmospheric gases that contribute to the greenhouse effect. greenhouse gas pollution," Dolyny says. Through his study, Dolyny also learned that all over Canada "poisonous contaminants from open dumps (open to the atmosphere) are leaching into water tables." "If you ask the average Canadian about our environment, he or she will tell you how pristine it is compared to the environment in the United States," Dolyny says. This is not the case, says Dolyny, pointing out the banning of open dumps by the Americans in 1991. Dolyny says landfill sites in Canada are not only damaging to the environment, but are an "eyesore eye·sore n. Something, such as a distressed building, that is unpleasant or offensive to view. eyesore Noun something very ugly Noun 1. " compared to those in the United States. "At Riverview, Mich. they have $1-million homes within 400 feet of the biomass waste disposal and recovery system. An 18-hole golf course has been built on top of another former disposal/recovery site," he says. "At the Riverview site there are no rats, there is no smell and it's esthetically pleasing," Dolyny says. |
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