05-14-2008, 11:04 AM
Anybody have any thoughts? Doesn't seem like much of a plan...?
http://starbulletin.com/breaking/breaking.php?id=7067
Big Island council rejects waste-to-energy project
Vote was 5-4
Associated Press
The Hawaii County Council has opted to trash a controversial waste-to-energy project, leaving the Big Island with no long-term plan for its solid waste.
A resolution that would have given Wheelabrator Technologies Inc. six months to finalize its design-build price and to produce an environmental impact statement was defeated 5-4 today.
“This is thoroughly disappointing,” Mayor Harry Kim said after the vote. “I feel they made a huge mistake here today. Where we go from here is where we are now. This is something for the next administration and council.”
The county’s tentative deal with Wheelabrator had an estimated cost to taxpayers of $11.5 million annually over the life of a 25-year contract.
The New Hampshire-based subsidiary of Waste Management Inc. was to have designed, built, run and maintained an incinerator to handle the more than 230 tons of trash now going daily to the county’s Hilo landfill.
The dump likely will close within four years, leaving the island with just one landfill, Puanahulu, along the same stretch of highway as the luxury Kohala Coast resorts.
Wheelabrator’s plan was to incinerate garbage in a plant to be built next to the Hilo dump. The waste-to-energy process would create enough surplus electricity to power nearly 2,000 homes, with the county keeping 90 percent of the revenues.
However, five of the council members nixed the deal, saying it was too costly, residents were against it and the county should be focusing on aggressive curbside recycling.
http://starbulletin.com/breaking/breaking.php?id=7067
Big Island council rejects waste-to-energy project
Vote was 5-4
Associated Press
The Hawaii County Council has opted to trash a controversial waste-to-energy project, leaving the Big Island with no long-term plan for its solid waste.
A resolution that would have given Wheelabrator Technologies Inc. six months to finalize its design-build price and to produce an environmental impact statement was defeated 5-4 today.
“This is thoroughly disappointing,” Mayor Harry Kim said after the vote. “I feel they made a huge mistake here today. Where we go from here is where we are now. This is something for the next administration and council.”
The county’s tentative deal with Wheelabrator had an estimated cost to taxpayers of $11.5 million annually over the life of a 25-year contract.
The New Hampshire-based subsidiary of Waste Management Inc. was to have designed, built, run and maintained an incinerator to handle the more than 230 tons of trash now going daily to the county’s Hilo landfill.
The dump likely will close within four years, leaving the island with just one landfill, Puanahulu, along the same stretch of highway as the luxury Kohala Coast resorts.
Wheelabrator’s plan was to incinerate garbage in a plant to be built next to the Hilo dump. The waste-to-energy process would create enough surplus electricity to power nearly 2,000 homes, with the county keeping 90 percent of the revenues.
However, five of the council members nixed the deal, saying it was too costly, residents were against it and the county should be focusing on aggressive curbside recycling.