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2010-02-17 - PLASCO et l'Industrial Development Agency de Pologne signent un protocole d'entente

La Ville d’Ottawa donne le feu vert

TDDC annonce le financement pour Plasco

Les travaux de construction débutent

2008-06-10 - Chilean President visits PlascoEnergy’s demonstration facility

2007-12-03 - First Reserve leads PlascoEnergy equity funding

2007-12-03 - First Reserve leads PlascoEnergy equity funding

2007-10-25 - First All-Canadian Cleantech Index to be launched

2007-10-24 - PlascoEnergy Delivers Power to Hydro Ottawa Grid

2008-06-11 - Full-size Plasco plant gets OK

2008-06-03 - Waste-to-energy Plasco plant should go big: Ottawa staff

2007-04-30 - Clean Break

2008-06-25 - City of Ottawa moves forward with 400 Tonne-per-day PlascoEnergy Facility

2007-04-27 - Ontario gives Plasco $4M for Ottawa waste project

2007-04-27 - McGuinty Government Invests in Green Technology

2007-04-12 - Waste Energy Plant to open in June

2008-06-17 - Presentation from Public Meeting

 

2008-06-11 - Full-size Plasco plant gets OK

Will take up to 2 years for all approvals

Patrick Dare, The Ottawa Citizen
Published: Wednesday, June 11, 2008

The City of Ottawa is going ahead with its partnership with businessman Rod Bryden to move from testing its garbage-to-power technology to building a full commercial-size plant.

Yesterday, after a closed session with the city's lawyer, the planning committee authorized city manager Kent Kirkpatrick to proceed with a detailed legal agreement with Mr. Bryden's Plasco Energy Group to build a commercial-scale plant on four acres the city owns next to its Trail Road landfill.

The deal must still go to full council, but is expected to be approved.

The city has been a partner with Plasco for its test plant. The technology uses heat and chambers to break down garbage and extract gas that is either flared off or used to generate electricity.

Under the deal, the city will pay Plasco about $8 million for taking residential garbage that isn't recycled or composted. Because the city was a partner in testing the technology, it will get royalties of up to $3.5 million a year after Plasco plants have been sold to other countries and cities and are operating.

It will take up to two years to get all of the approvals for the new plant.

Mr. Bryden assured councillors yesterday that the technology must meet strict standards, confirmed by an independent consultant, to ensure harmful pollutants are not pumped into the air.

Mr. Kirkpatrick was asked about the dividends to the city and he said keeping garbage out of a landfill is a major benefit. City officials have estimated that if Ottawa were to try to establish a new landfill, the costs could reach $150 million and approvals would take years.

The plant will cost about $125 million, all of which will be paid by the company.

This article originally appeared in The Ottawa Citizen.