kadena usaf air base, okinawa, japan; waste to energy feasibility study

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Summary Presentation for Waste to Energy Feasibility at Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan Contract No. FA8903-08-D-8766-0048 www.amec.com

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This is the finding report that our team created for the Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study. It looked at three different technologies: Incineration, Plasma Gasification, and Anaerobic Digestion. Lots of good information, and more backup can be found in the report. Provided technical input, peer review, environmental, and project oversight for a feasibility study to evaluate incineration, plasma gasification, and anaerobic digestion as waste to energy technologies on the island of Okinawa, Japan. Each technology was evaluated for technical feasibility with the current waste stream at KAB, potential energy generation and uses, cost and payback, and potential environmental issues. Based on this evaluation, a Waste-to-Energy Feasibility Assessment Report was prepared for KAB. This report discusses the feasibility of each of these waste-to-energy technologies, evaluates environmental permitting issues for each technology, recommends uses for generated energy (electricity, steam, etc.), and discusses life cycle costs and payback. Recommendations were made regarding the preferred waste-to-energy technology for implementation at KAB.

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Page 1: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

Summary Presentation forWaste to Energy Feasibility at Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan

Contract No. FA8903-08-D-8766-0048

www.amec.com

Page 2: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Discussion Topics

Requirements of the Statement of Work

AMEC’s Recommendations

Technologies Investigated

Advantages and Disadvantages

Cost Impacts

Steps moving forward

Q&A

Page 3: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Requirements from the Statement of Work

Site Visit Determine what could be found Talk to shareholders Find sites to be used for future development

Draft and Final Reports Compare technologies to constraints provided by the site visit First Glance into the economics of the process and the system Recommendations for moving forward

This Presentation Summarize the findings of the report Engage in conversation about what the results mean Determine if recommendations should be pursued.

Page 4: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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AMEC’s Recommendations

Technology: Plasma Gasification

Timeline : Within three years (2013)

Location: To be determined by design (current recommendation is the Chibana Area)

Fluctuating Cost Factors: Cost to dispose Need for freshwater Volume to dispose Need for Hazardous Waste Disposal Need for additional cooling

Approximate Capital Cost : ~ $50M USD (4.62B yen)

Approximate Cost to Break-Even (@15,000 MT MSWA) : ~$450/MT

Page 5: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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AMEC Recommendations (cont.)

Cost to dispose Current Price: $300/MT Current Local Civilian Price: $850/MT Renegotiation of MSW contract in 2013

Need for freshwater Desalinization not pursued at this time Typhoon Event – Water Loss – Bottled Water alternative - $25k per day.

Disposal Volume Including Local Civilian Population Including Sister Services Can waste be “recycled” into energy?

Need for Hazardous Waste Disposal Current method includes shipping to Kansas

Need for additional cooling Depending on services and new construction due to USMC movement

Page 6: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Technologies Investigated

Incineration Burning material High Energy Output, Medium Byproduct Output Medium feedstock availability Currently underway in two locations on island (not waste to energy)

Bio-digestion Wastewater treatment option Medium Net Energy Output, Highest Byproduct Output Limited feedstock availability

Plasma Gasification Heating waste to plasma temperatures, creating synthetic gases High Energy Output, Lowest Byproduct Output Highest Feedstock Availability

Page 7: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Technologies Investigated (cont.)

Page 8: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Technologies Investigated (cont.)

Page 9: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Technologies Investigated (cont.)

Page 10: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Technologies Investigated (cont.)

Page 11: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Advantages and Disadvantages

Incineration Pros:

– Greatly reduces MSW volume

– Requires recycling

– High Energy Output

– Cheap and easy technology

– Can produce desalinized water and steam for chillers

– Lower Capital Cost

Cons:– It is currently being done by others on the island (competition)

– Adverse impacts to the environment (but can be mitigated for a cost)

– Cannot reduce all waste streams

Page 12: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Advantages and Disadvantages

Plasma Gasification Pros:

– Greatly reduces MSW volume

– Compliments recycling

– High Energy Output

– Environmentally friendlier (still needs some controls)

– Can reduce all waste streams

Cons:– Higher Capital Cost

– Higher Annual Costs

– Complicated technology

Page 13: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Cost Impacts

Page 14: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Cost Impacts (cont.)

Page 15: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Cost Impacts (cont.)

Page 16: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Cost Impacts (cont.)

Page 17: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Steps moving forward

AMEC recommends Development of 35-100% Design Evaluation of MSW price increase likelihood Re-evaluation of desalinization and increased cooling load needs Evaluation of Civilian and Sister Services cooperation to increase economies of

scale

AMEC also noted that the 18th CEG could benefit from: Base wide Energy and Water Conservation Net-Zero Energy Study

– Solar PV, Solar Water Heating, Wind Power, Ocean Power

LEED applicability Relocation design of USMC assets with vision towards energy efficiency Technology reviews for applicability, especially with operations and maintenance Third Party Financing Assistance Consolidated Back-Up Power and Diesel Pumps

Page 18: Kadena USAF Air Base, Okinawa, Japan; Waste To Energy Feasibility Study

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Shitsumon to kaitō (Questions and Answers)

Has AMEC fulfilled your needs?

Was AMEC enjoyable/effective to work with?

Are their other items you would like to discuss within this scope?

Are their items you would like to discuss outside this scope?