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Single stream success: Blue Mountain Recycling finds success with its single-stream MRF in Philadelphia.


The hottest development in the recycling world during the past five years has been the movement toward single-stream collection of post-consumer recyclables. Using a host of new technologies, single-stream material recovery facility (MRF MRF Markov Random Field
MRF Material Recovery Facility
MRF Materials Recycling Facility
MRF Motorcycle Riders Foundation
MRF Medium Range Forecast (weather forecasting model)
MRF Movement for Rights and Freedoms
) operators are now able to accept mixed loads of paper, bottles and cans from commercial and residential sources.

Single-stream programs allow for fully and semi-automated containerized con·tain·er·ize  
v.tr. con·tain·er·ized, con·tain·er·iz·ing, con·tain·er·iz·es
1. To package (cargo) in large standardized containers for efficient shipping and handling.

2.
 residential collection using traditional compactor trucks. Proponents say collection costs can be reduced by 35 percent to 50 percent.

But the reality, as many operators and recycling coordinators know, is that collection efficiency gains can also mean reduced material quality and added processing costs. Numerous studies show varying degrees of success for single-stream systems because of this.

Purchasing the right type of equipment, developing the proper relationships with markets, working carefully with municipal and commercial haulers and designing for specific types of material mixes all play a part in the success or failure of single-stream systems.

In Philadelphia, two entrepreneurs with more than 50 years of experience between them have achieved single-stream success. David Dilenno and Herb Northrop, the founders of Blue Mountain Recycling (acquired recently by Casella Waste Systems), have been involved in trash and recycling their entire careers. Both have worked for large industry players and independent recycling firms as well.

In 2000 they went out on a limb and bought an idle 62,000-square-foot Philadelphia paper-processing plant built in the early 1990s to handle high-grade office paper. Dilenno and Northrop gutted the operation then rebuilt it from scratch to process mixed commercial and institutional fiber. They also installed a separation system for food and beverage F&B is a common abbreviation in the United States and Commonwealth countries, including Hong Kong. F&B is typically the widely accepted abbreviation for "Food and Beverage," which is the sector/industry that specializes in the conceptualization, the making of, and delivery of foods.  containers.

By early 2003 Blue Mountain was packing roughly 5,000 tons per month of material from commercial and residential programs--including a significant portion of Philadelphia's curbside curb·side  
n.
1. The side of a pavement or street that is bordered by a curb.

2. A sidewalk.

adj.
Located, operating, or occurring at or along the sidewalk or curb:
 bottles and cans.

"We started out with a dual-stream setup," says Dilenno, "but it didn't take too long with technology developments and the markets stabilizing before we set our sights on single stream."

Blue Mountain's Philadelphia facility has gone through numerous retrofits throughout the past few years, but can now accept fully commingled loads of fiber and food and beverage containers. After shifting to single stream, the MRF processes up to 12,000 tons per month, though that figure is growing.

DESIGNING FOR GLASS. During the early planning stages for the 2004 single-stream renovation, Dilenno and Northrup looked at what others were already doing in the industry. "California was leading the charge," says Dilenno, "They had the first generation of single-stream systems." However, the California facilities had a number of problems with material flow and sometimes had to deal with costly downtime The time during which a computer is not functioning due to hardware, operating system or application program failure.  and quality control issues, he adds. Broken glass seemed an almost insurmountable problem, as well.

With a lot of contemplation and a good deal of common sense, Dilenno and Northrop thought through this problem. "We decided that one of the secrets to single-stream processing had to be to design your system to actually accommodate broken glass," says Northrop. Most single-stream MRFs are built to keep glass out of the paper stream as fiber flows through the facility. At Blue Mountain's Philadelphia plant, however, the system has been designed to "want broken glass."

Blue Mountain Recycling now produces more than 2,000 tons per month of marketable crushed glass cullet cul·let  
n.
Scraps of broken or waste glass gathered for remelting, especially with new material.



[Probably alteration of collet, neck of glass left on the blowing iron, from French,
. DiInneo and Northrop are in the process of developing 18 different markets for this material, including the use of culler cull  
tr.v. culled, cull·ing, culls
1. To pick out from others; select.

2. To gather; collect.

3. To remove rejected members or parts from (a herd, for example).

n.
 as a bulking agent for river dredge, in asphalt blends and concrete mix applications and as a filter medium.

The MRF also handles I0,000 tons of mixed paper, cardboard and commingled food and beverage containers.

THE KEY SCREEN. Trucks dump loads of mixed recyclables in a large bay at the top of Blue Mountain's main facility. Cardboard is separated from the mix using a cardboard screen made by Bulk Handling Systems, Eugene, Ore. Magnets and eddy currents yank Yank

steamship stoker vainly tries to climb the social ladder, then fails in attempt to avenge himself on society. [Am. Drama: O’Neill The Hairy Ape in Sobel, 339]

See : Failure



(jargon) yank
 ferrous ferrous (fĕr`əs), iron in the +2 valence state.


Containing or having to do with iron. The difference between ferrous and ferric is the number of valence electrons they contain (ferrous contains two and ferric contains three), which
 metals and aluminum out of the system. Plastic is mostly hand sorted.

The key to Blue Mountain's system, though, is its new V-Screen Separator made by CP Manufacturing, National City, Calif. Using a combination of gravity, spinning discs and air, the paper portion of the mixed material flows onto the V-Screen. As the discs spin, small, heavier material falls to the bottom of the V, pouring onto another conveyor heading for further separation. Paper--free sheet, magazines, newspapers, phone books and more--floats on top of the discs and is blown up and over the sides of the screen, cascading onto two large conveyors where workers perform a negative sort, pulling out non-fiber materials.

Dilenno says, "Our system raises the bar for recycling. Now it will be easier for people to recycle more materials, ultimately increasing volume in programs, reducing costs to communities and improving our environment."

Blue Mountain has long-term contracts for all of the commodities it sells, its biggest with Kimberly-Clark. The MRF provides the paper giant with a quality tissue-grade mix loaded onto railroad cars that sit inside its MRE MRE
abbr.
meal ready to eat
 "We get a detailed analysis regularly from the mill when they come to re-qualify our material," says Dilenno. "They say our color values are superior and that our product is clean."

Blue Mountain also has supply partnerships with Anheuser-Busch for aluminum cans; Tube City Inc. for steel; Apex Environmental for pulverized pul·ver·ize  
v. pul·ver·ized, pul·ver·iz·ing, pul·ver·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To pound, crush, or grind to a powder or dust.

2. To demolish.

v.intr.
 glass; Mohawk Industries Mohawk Industries is an American company that supplies residential and commercial flooring and other home products. It is one of the two largest carpet manufacturers in the world. It is exchanged on the New York Stock Exchange under the listed security MHK. , Wellman and Shaw Carpet for PET; KW Plastics and Trex Co. for HDPE HDPE
abbr.
high-density polyethylene
; and Smurf-it-Stone Container, Bowater, Abitibi-Consolidated, Solvay Paperboard and Canusa Corp.--along with Kimberly-Clark--for fiber.

CALCULATING CONTAMINANTS. As far as material contamination is concerned, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 a 2005 report by the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (often abbreviated PA DEP, or just DEP) is state agency in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. See also
  • List of Pennsylvania state agencies
References
 titled "Pennsylvania Recycled Material Con> position Analysis", residue from Blue Mountain's Philadelphia MRF ranges from 2 percent to 4 percent for residential material and 5 percent to 10 percent for commercial loads of paper. Now that its single-stream system is fully up and running, Dilenno says Blue Mountain's Philadelphia MRF is seeing overall residue out-throws that range from 5 percent to 12 percent.

A WORK IN PROGRESS. Northrop stresses that the Philadelphia facility is a work in progress. "We're taking a systems approach to this. The V-Screen was a multi-million dollar investment and it costs a lot to operate and maintain. This year we're also putting in a number of optical sorters on our lines to better segregate seg·re·gate  
v. seg·re·gat·ed, seg·re·gat·ing, seg·re·gates

v.tr.
1. To separate or isolate from others or from a main body or group. See Synonyms at isolate.

2.
 our plastic container mix."

These sorters will first separate plastics by resin type and then further sort by color and density. As Blue Mountain continues to sec more residential material, management calculates that the sorters should quickly pay for themselves.

Blue Mountain's success has also led to the design and operation of a second MRF in nearby Montgomery County Montgomery County may refer to:
  • Montgomery County, Alabama
  • Montgomery County, Arkansas
  • Montgomery County, Georgia
  • Montgomery County, Illinois
  • Montgomery County, Indiana
  • Montgomery County, Iowa
  • Montgomery County, Kansas
. Dilenno and Northrop are also considering an option to expand into the Wilmington, Del., market.

The quality of an operation like Blue Mountain has not gone unnoticed. Casella Waste Systems of Rutland, Vt., acquired the company in September.

In a recent report to investors, Casella Chairman and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  John W. Casella said the Blue Mountain transaction "is a great example of the execution of our strategic goals of sustainability--making recycling more sustainable economically for both our customers and providers of services and for driving significantly greater utilization of the company's recycling assets."

With Casella's support, Dilenno and Northrop can continue to invest in Blue Mountain.

Dilenno says, "We're like a pebble in the lake. Everything in the industry was on autopilot for a long time there. No one was being creative. But we're having a lot of fun now and we're making a difference. We're helping change recycling in Philadelphia and we're pushing the industry forward at the same time."

The author is a contributing editor A contributing editor is a magazine job title that varies in responsibilities. Most often, a contributing editor is a freelancer who has proven ability and readership draw.  to In Business who writes on recycling and sustainable development Sustainable development is a socio-ecological process characterized by the fulfilment of human needs while maintaining the quality of the natural environment indefinitely. The linkage between environment and development was globally recognized in 1980, when the International Union  out of Philadelphia. He can be reached through www.blueolives.blogspot.com.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:material recovery facility
Author:Biddle, David
Publication:Recycling Today
Article Type:Company Profile
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:1293
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