Halifax seeks to contain organic waste cost with long-term deal - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 04:46 AM | Calgary | -1.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Halifax seeks to contain organic waste cost with long-term deal

The city will be issuing a request for qualifications this week to find out who would like to design, build, own and operate its organic composting system for the Halifax region.

City considering contract of up to 35 years with company that will operate composting system

The city is hoping the new operator of the compost plants will continue composting at the existing two sites while it upgrades or builds new facilities there. (Aim Environmental Group/YouTube)

Halifax pioneered large-scale curbside collection of organic material in Canada 20 years ago. Now, the city is searching for a company to manage its organic waste for up to 35 years.

"For Halifax it's a big deal," saidMattKeliher, the city's manager of solid waste. "It's a big contract. It's a long-term contract and we want to make sure we get it right."

This week, the city will find out which companies want to be on the short list to design, build,own and operate its organic composting system under a 25- to 35-year deal. On Tuesday, it will open a request for qualifications from interested bidders.

The quality of the compost that's come out of the two facilities is poor. (Kevin Wentzell)

At today's prices, the contract could be worth $250 million.Keliher saidthe city wants to drive down those costs by locking in for the first 10 to 15 years with a fixed-price contract adjusted only by inflation.

"That way we are guaranteed a set fee for 15 years maybe it's 10, maybe it's a little bit longer. But we are really looking to confine those costs," he said.

In the past, the city has renegotiated every five years, with costs typically jumping by 20 to 40 per cent each time.

City wants to 'hand over the keys'

The municipality spends about $150 a tonne,or $8 million a year, for composting at twoprivately operated facilities. Oneis owned and operated by Miller Group and is located in the Burnside area of Dartmouth.The other, located atRagged Lake in Halifax, is managed by AIM Environmental Group.

The leases on those facilities expire March 31, 2019.

A new operator will be expected to walk in and continue composting operations at the two sites while it upgrades or builds new facilities there. The city saidcomposting within the municipality must be at those locations.

An open green bin filled with food.
The city composts 50,000 tonnes of organic material a year. (Getty Images)

Bidders will have an option to build a composting facility outside the city, but the operator must use existing sites as a transfer station.

"Right now, the preference is to on March 31,2019 hand over the keys to the new operator," saidKeliher.

How the composting system works

The city composts 50,000 tonnes of organic material a year collected from 136,000 residential green bins and businesses.

At both locations, the organic material is screened and dumped into aerated containers for sevento 10 days. Then it is tipped onto a curing floor and cured for up to threemonths.

After that, it's screened again and trucked to Elmsdale Landscaping, where it is further cured for use in their landscaping products.

What comes out of thecomposting facilities is poor quality, as it's too wet and acidicto meet provincial Environment Department guidelines. Consultants hired to examine the Ragged Lake facility reported in 2015 the organic material is not cured long enough or turned enough times.

The next operator will be expected to comply with environmental standards.

City has to rezone parkland for expansion

Halifax is planning to expand its footprint at the Ragged Lake location to accommodate growth in composting over the next three decades.Proponents have been told they must be able to handle up to 75,000 tonnes per year.

There is no place to grow at the Burnside facility, located on Gloria McCluskey Avenue. But there's a problem with expansion at Ragged Lake.

In the early 2000s, council decided to designate the area around the Ragged Lake facility as parkland. The city is now working torezone the area to permit composting.

Thatplan has its opponents.

Last October, the Western CommonAdvisory Committee,a volunteer citizens group,voted unanimously to rejectthe proposed expansion at Ragged Lake.

Mobile users: View the document
(PDF KB)
(Text KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content

The bio gas option

The city is giving proponents the option to build an anaerobic digestion system, which uses micro-organisms to break down biodegradable material in airless containers. In additionto soil additives, another end product is methane gas, which can be used to generate electricity or be processed into natural gas.

Ray Ct, a professor emeritus at the Dalhousie University School for Resource and Environmental Studies, saidthat's the way to go. "It's an opportunity to get more out of the compost material in the future than we have in the past."

Ct saidthe key is findinga company with a track record in operating compost systems successfully.

He cites "horrendous" smells emanating from the Ragged Lake facility on Prospect Road.

"There have been other issues with other facilities in Nova Scotia where the roofsthe metal roofs in these buildingsget eaten away by the acid air in these buildings, which again suggests to me they were not being operated optimally," he said.