“Currently there are two dire problems under the spotlight in South
Africa; the energy supply crisis and the proliferating creation of waste.
Authorities are hard pressed to find effective and sustainable solutions to
these quandaries. However, there is a possible solution to satisfy both
problems simultaneously,” says Quentin van Coller, Business Development manager
at Nyamezela Group.
Nyamezela Group, in conjunction with Matrix Strategic Solutions (a
company based in Switzerland), is poised to promote a sustainable and proven “waste-to-energy”
(W2E) technology solution in the South African market. Matrix Strategic
Solutions specialises in potential development (as opposed to resource
utilisation) of sustainability solutions in the fields of energy, environmental
and biotech technologies. Matrix Strategic Solutions has a successful track
record of international projects of profitable installations, successful sites
and unique breakthroughs in their fields of expertise.
“The Consulting Engineers and Energy and Minerals Divisions at Nyamezela
Group already have extensive experience in the management of solid waste as
well as undertaking projects in the energy/electrical industries,” says Van
Coller.
According to Van Coller, the following problems are increasing in
magnitude with little or no resolution on the horizon:
·
Mounting volumes of waste
generation from residential, commercial and industrial sectors.
·
Increasing volumes of illegal
dumping and the creation of toxic and medical waste.
·
Decreasing availability of adequate
landfill sites.
·
Long term detrimental health effect
of the landfill sites – toxic gases, odours and the contamination of ground
water.
·
Environmental impact and pollution
from the incineration by-products in landfills.
·
Litter on landscapes.
·
Increasing cost of waste disposal.
·
Local and global results of carbon
emissions pollution.
·
Electricity supply not keeping pace
with population and industry growth.
·
Attempted recycling initiatives not
being successful due to budgets, awareness programs, infrastructure and the
manpower to be able to fulfil the desired objectives not readily available.
“South Africa has waste, lots of it and the volumes are spiralling out
of control,” says Van Coller before explaining that the W2E solution addresses
and eliminates all of the above problems with a one-stop sustainable solution
that turns garbage into a valuable resource for producing energy as well as a
number of ‘clean’ by-products. “This solution fulfils the objectives and
criteria publicised in numerous waste management policies and documents
generated at local and national level.”
Dumping sites reaching saturation point
“As a developing nation, the primary disposal of all solid waste in
South Africa is to dump the waste into designated landfills or onto dump sites.
But we are reaching a saturation point in landfills, so where to next?” asks
Van Coller. “In developed countries, due to legislation as well as a shortage
of ‘waste’ or spare land for landfills, most waste treatment processes are
based on incineration where the matter is destroyed with numerous by-products.”
Incineration of waste materials converts the waste into incinerator
bottom ash, flue gases, particulates or fly ash and heat, which can in turn be
used to generate electric power. The flue gases are cleaned of pollutants
before they are dispersed in the atmosphere.
“Fundamentally, the energy of the waste is converted to thermal energy,
while the flue gas only carries a small amount of reusable energy. However, the
popularity of this technology is waning as the detriments are now far
outweighing the benefits,” says Van Coller.
How the W2E solution works
The W2E solution is deployed in a modular fashion by using an optimised
module (thermal units) size handling up to 40 000 tons of waste per annum
(tpa). For higher quantities of waste processing, an additional 40 000 t.p.a.
modules are added in parallel and feeding into a bank of electricity generating
units, thus establishing a high degree of redundancy.
“This approach has proven to be more economical than building large
thermal blocks, which are difficult to control. Although these modules are all
contained in one building, the modularisation allows for a decentralisation
strategy, thereby optimising waste removal logistics, urban structure,
investment cost and electricity usage in the grid.”
“The W2E process is a pyrolysis process also termed gasification,” says
Van Coller.
The W2E process is designed similarly to a naturally occurring
gasification system – the volcano. The self-sustaining combustion system (lava)
allows the solids to convert to gases on the surface and the surface determines
the volume of the process gas. This is time independent.
“As long as organic matter is present, a process gas will be generated.
The temperature of this system is high – around 1 500°C, so even steels will
melt. Certain rocks will also melt and the enclosed carbon will be released,
leaving behind a slag. Generally the gasification process does not generate any
ashes or residual particles in the syngas due to the lack of forced
incineration. But since certain volatile molecules in their combination form a
combustible gas, the syngas is ideal for electricity generation,” says Van
Coller.
The W2E process is designed around the gasification process (pyrolysis),
whereby it is accepted that the process gas or syngas will contain certain
molecular chains which are based on hydrocarbon chains (petroleum products and
plastics), which will form dioxins and furans upon cooling and condensation.
“It is for this reason that the process gas will undergo high energy and
high temperature cracking by means of a plasma stream, where the remaining
molecular chains are cracked into isolated and inactive molecules. This again
is a physical process – high kinetic energy is used to crack certain ‘ionic’
molecular links and ‘ionises’ these molecules to become inactive. There is no
chemical reaction – it’s physics. This cracking process must be controlled in
such a way, that the combustible elements of the gas are not combusted, i.e.
the gas is not burnt up. This is only possible when the chemical composition of
the gas is known,” says Van Coller.
After the cracking process, the unwanted elements can be simply filtered
out on a chemical basis. According to Van Coller, these filtering processes are
standard technology and easily controlled. “An example would be how chloride is
filtered out by means of calcium carbonate resulting in calcium chloride. There
are many companies making use of the gasification process in order to generate
electricity and the list of companies installing and those operating plants on
the basis of biomass or wood chips, is long. There is nothing unproven in this
process. The only drawback is, when using contaminated woods, the filtering
system will have to be designed to be able to cope with the toxins,” says van
Coller.
About the W2E system
Pyrolysis is the physical
decomposition/transition process of condensed organic substances by heating.
Decomposition implies the breaking down of present forms of matter, changing
the form (from a solid to liquid or from a solid to a gaseous form).
Gasification is the transition from a solid to a gaseous form, without the
fundamental destruction of matter, which is the case during the incineration
process.
Gasification is a process that converts carbonaceous materials, such as
coal, petroleum, biofuel, or biomass, into carbon monoxide and hydrogen by
reacting with the raw material, such as house waste, or compost at high
temperatures with a controlled amount of oxygen and/or steam. The resulting gas
mixture is called synthesis gas or syngas and is itself a fuel. Syngas and flue
gas are generally of different composition. Gasification is a method for
extracting energy from many different types of organic materials. It should be
noted, that Linde has a process, by which plastics can be gasified on the basis
of steam.
Differences between incineration and W2E gasification:
|
Incineration |
W2E |
|
·
Incineration produces toxic
bottom ash, fly ash and slag, which needs to be landfilled. ·
Incineration loses significant
amounts of thermal energy. ·
A minimum of 60% of the system
investment is for filtering, denox etc. ·
Incineration is an old and
obsolete technology. |
·
W2E produces no toxic
by-products. ·
No ash residue. ·
All slag is vitrified due to the
high temperature and this end product (tiny vitreous pebbles) can be used in
road construction. ·
No reactive or residual toxins
for landfilling. ·
The process is designed with an
energy transformation focus. ·
A W2E plant is a modular system
of individual process sections supplied by established companies. ·
The W2E process is a
conservational and green approach to the waste and mess generated by
civilisation. |
Key performance indicators of the W2E system
Plant capacity: 120
000 t.p.a.
Process capacity: 13.7
t/hr (329 t/day)
Electricity generation: 270
GWh p.a.
Generator capacity nominal: 33
750 kVA
CO2 savings: 338
000 t.p.a.
CO2 certificate value: Approximately
57 500 000 ZAR p.a
Plant capacity: 200
000 t p.a.
Process capacity: 22.8
t/hr (548 t / day)
Electricity generation: 747
GWh p.a.
Generator capacity nominal: 104
460 kVA
CO2 savings: 980
000 t.p.a.
CO2 certificate value: Approximately
160 660 000 ZAR p.a.
Matrix Strategic Solutions and Nyamezela Group offer a number of
additional add-ons which make the system more efficient (full documentation of
the processes can be obtained from Nyamezela Group). “The costs of
electrification are set to treble in the next two years and waste is escalating
out of control. We can make a difference and I believe this is an
exciting time to introduce this type of solution to South Africa,” concludes
Van Coller.
For more information, contact Quentin van Coller on +27 21 5510626 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .


