[Biofuel] City plants save millions in energy costs - Ottawa Citizen - 2006.12.22

2006-12-22 Thread Darryl McMahon
Now that's what he's talking about: O'Brien praises workers' ingenuity:
City plants save millions in energy costs
Byline: Jake Rupert
Illustration: Photo: Pat McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen / Methane gas, a
byproduct of sewage treatment that was once burned off, is running
engines that produce $1.4 million of electricity yearly.; Photo: Pat 
McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen / from left, Dave McCartney and Dave 
Robertson said they 'knew they were
on to something' when the $4.5-million power-producing system at the 
sewage treatment plant paid for itself in a few years.

When Ottawa Mayor Larry O'Brien was campaigning
two months ago, he spoke about creating a culture of
excellence at City Hall, but he had a difficult time
explaining how it would work.
Yesterday, he heard how a group of city utility
workers recently won an award for coming up with
innovative ways of saving the city $2.8 million per
year on energy costs.
His eyes just beamed when he heard how Dave
McCartney, manger of drainage and waste water
services, and Dave Robertson, manager of waste
water treatment, created a system to turn methane
gas, a byproduct of sewage treatment that used to be
burned off, into $1.4 million of savings at the city's
sewage treatment plant.
Thanks to these men, Ottawa is the first city in
Canada to burn the gas effectively through three
16-cylinder, locomotive-sized engines, creating half
the power the plant uses.
The system, devised by the men and their staff, cost
$4.5 million to install in 1997 and paid for itself by
2002.
That's exactly the kind of thing I'm look for, Mr.
O'Brien said. Exactly what I'm talking about. The
true strength of an organization is not in the executive
office or administration. It's with its operational
people.
These guys had an excellent idea, and we need more
of them. That's the kind of culture I want to develop.
They should get an award from the city, too.
Last week, the city's utility department got the top
prize from the Ontario Municipal Benchmarking
Initiative, which is made up of officials from 15 cities
in the province.
Ottawa won for the system at the sewage treatment
centre and another project that sees $1.4 million in
hydro electricity generated at the Fleet Street
pumping station using a natural drop in elevation.
The power is used in pumps that send drinking water
across a large portion of the city.
Ken Thompson is an engineer who chaired the
selection panel that helped choose Ottawa for the
award.
He said other municipalities are doing similar things
on the energy conservation front, but Ottawa has
taken a more large- scale and detailed approach to the
issue.
It's unique, he said. They've really taken a serious
approach to managing electricity, and they have been
innovative enough to make things work quite well.
The detailed information on, and management of,
energy consumption at the sewage treatment plant is
staggering.
At the click of a computer mouse, workers can check
exactly how much electricity the plant is using, how
much it's producing, and how much it is taking from
the grid. Another click can ramp up power produced
by the engines, bring on more supply from diesel
generators, or pull more from the grid. It's even
possible to tell if a major component is pulling more
or less power than it should.
Mr. McCartney said the idea for the system was his,
but it took Mr. Robertson and a crew of engineers to
design the system.
The methane is produced by bacteria in airless
digesters as they eat biosolids in the sewage. The gas
is captured and sent to a building housing the
engines, which roar around the clock and each
produce enough electricity in an hour to power an
average house for a month. The electricity is then put
on the plant's internal grid.
Coolant from the engines is sent to an exchanger and
the heat is transferred to the plant's water boiler
heating system.
Not letting anything go to waste, the boiler system
water is then passed through the engines' searing
exhaust system to be heated up further.
Mr. McCartney said the system is working so well
that several other municipalities have sent people to
check it out.
It's been done before, but never as successfully as
we have, Mr. Robertson said. It feels nice to get the
award. When it paid for itself so quickly, we knew
we were on to something.
If the two energy creating projects didn't exist,
property taxes would have to increase .3 per cent to
buy more power, and this is something that is not lost
on Ottawa's new mayor.
I think these guys are municipal heroes, Mr.
O'Brien said.



-- 
Darryl McMahon
It's your planet.  If you won't look after it, who will?

The Emperor's New Hydrogen Economy (now in print and eBook)
http://www.econogics.com/TENHE/

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Search the combined Biofuel and 

Re: [Biofuel] City plants save millions in energy costs - Ottawa Citizen - 2006.12.22

2006-12-22 Thread Kirk McLoren
The Hyperion plant has been doing this for 30 years (LosAngeles)
  Kirk

Darryl McMahon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Now that's what he's talking about: O'Brien praises workers' ingenuity:
City plants save millions in energy costs
Byline: Jake Rupert
Illustration: Photo: Pat McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen / Methane gas, a
byproduct of sewage treatment that was once burned off, is running
engines that produce $1.4 million of electricity yearly.; Photo: Pat 
McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen / from left, Dave McCartney and Dave 
Robertson said they 'knew they were
on to something' when the $4.5-million power-producing system at the 
sewage treatment plant paid for itself in a few years.

When Ottawa Mayor Larry O'Brien was campaigning
two months ago, he spoke about creating a culture of
excellence at City Hall, but he had a difficult time
explaining how it would work.
Yesterday, he heard how a group of city utility
workers recently won an award for coming up with
innovative ways of saving the city $2.8 million per
year on energy costs.
His eyes just beamed when he heard how Dave
McCartney, manger of drainage and waste water
services, and Dave Robertson, manager of waste
water treatment, created a system to turn methane
gas, a byproduct of sewage treatment that used to be
burned off, into $1.4 million of savings at the city's
sewage treatment plant.
Thanks to these men, Ottawa is the first city in
Canada to burn the gas effectively through three
16-cylinder, locomotive-sized engines, creating half
the power the plant uses.
The system, devised by the men and their staff, cost
$4.5 million to install in 1997 and paid for itself by
2002.
That's exactly the kind of thing I'm look for, Mr.
O'Brien said. Exactly what I'm talking about. The
true strength of an organization is not in the executive
office or administration. It's with its operational
people.
These guys had an excellent idea, and we need more
of them. That's the kind of culture I want to develop.
They should get an award from the city, too.
Last week, the city's utility department got the top
prize from the Ontario Municipal Benchmarking
Initiative, which is made up of officials from 15 cities
in the province.
Ottawa won for the system at the sewage treatment
centre and another project that sees $1.4 million in
hydro electricity generated at the Fleet Street
pumping station using a natural drop in elevation.
The power is used in pumps that send drinking water
across a large portion of the city.
Ken Thompson is an engineer who chaired the
selection panel that helped choose Ottawa for the
award.
He said other municipalities are doing similar things
on the energy conservation front, but Ottawa has
taken a more large- scale and detailed approach to the
issue.
It's unique, he said. They've really taken a serious
approach to managing electricity, and they have been
innovative enough to make things work quite well.
The detailed information on, and management of,
energy consumption at the sewage treatment plant is
staggering.
At the click of a computer mouse, workers can check
exactly how much electricity the plant is using, how
much it's producing, and how much it is taking from
the grid. Another click can ramp up power produced
by the engines, bring on more supply from diesel
generators, or pull more from the grid. It's even
possible to tell if a major component is pulling more
or less power than it should.
Mr. McCartney said the idea for the system was his,
but it took Mr. Robertson and a crew of engineers to
design the system.
The methane is produced by bacteria in airless
digesters as they eat biosolids in the sewage. The gas
is captured and sent to a building housing the
engines, which roar around the clock and each
produce enough electricity in an hour to power an
average house for a month. The electricity is then put
on the plant's internal grid.
Coolant from the engines is sent to an exchanger and
the heat is transferred to the plant's water boiler
heating system.
Not letting anything go to waste, the boiler system
water is then passed through the engines' searing
exhaust system to be heated up further.
Mr. McCartney said the system is working so well
that several other municipalities have sent people to
check it out.
It's been done before, but never as successfully as
we have, Mr. Robertson said. It feels nice to get the
award. When it paid for itself so quickly, we knew
we were on to something.
If the two energy creating projects didn't exist,
property taxes would have to increase .3 per cent to
buy more power, and this is something that is not lost
on Ottawa's new mayor.
I think these guys are municipal heroes, Mr.
O'Brien said.



-- 
Darryl McMahon
It's your planet. If you won't look after it, who will?

The Emperor's New Hydrogen Economy (now in print and eBook)
http://www.econogics.com/TENHE/

___
Biofuel mailing list
Biofuel@sustainablelists.org

Re: [Biofuel] City plants save millions in energy costs - Ottawa Citizen - 2006.12.22

2006-12-22 Thread Luke Hansen
A properly designed composting toilet doesn't require
any power at all ;P

And you can collect biogas from it, and the end
product is kickass for gardens.


--- Kirk McLoren [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 The Hyperion plant has been doing this for 30 years
 (LosAngeles)
   Kirk
 
 Darryl McMahon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
   Now that's what he's talking about: O'Brien
 praises workers' ingenuity:
 City plants save millions in energy costs
 Byline: Jake Rupert
 Illustration: Photo: Pat McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen
 / Methane gas, a
 byproduct of sewage treatment that was once burned
 off, is running
 engines that produce $1.4 million of electricity
 yearly.; Photo: Pat 
 McGrath, The Ottawa Citizen / from left, Dave
 McCartney and Dave 
 Robertson said they 'knew they were
 on to something' when the $4.5-million
 power-producing system at the 
 sewage treatment plant paid for itself in a few
 years.
 
 When Ottawa Mayor Larry O'Brien was campaigning
 two months ago, he spoke about creating a culture
 of
 excellence at City Hall, but he had a difficult
 time
 explaining how it would work.
 Yesterday, he heard how a group of city utility
 workers recently won an award for coming up with
 innovative ways of saving the city $2.8 million per
 year on energy costs.
 His eyes just beamed when he heard how Dave
 McCartney, manger of drainage and waste water
 services, and Dave Robertson, manager of waste
 water treatment, created a system to turn methane
 gas, a byproduct of sewage treatment that used to be
 burned off, into $1.4 million of savings at the
 city's
 sewage treatment plant.
 Thanks to these men, Ottawa is the first city in
 Canada to burn the gas effectively through three
 16-cylinder, locomotive-sized engines, creating half
 the power the plant uses.
 The system, devised by the men and their staff, cost
 $4.5 million to install in 1997 and paid for itself
 by
 2002.
 That's exactly the kind of thing I'm look for, Mr.
 O'Brien said. Exactly what I'm talking about. The
 true strength of an organization is not in the
 executive
 office or administration. It's with its operational
 people.
 These guys had an excellent idea, and we need more
 of them. That's the kind of culture I want to
 develop.
 They should get an award from the city, too.
 Last week, the city's utility department got the top
 prize from the Ontario Municipal Benchmarking
 Initiative, which is made up of officials from 15
 cities
 in the province.
 Ottawa won for the system at the sewage treatment
 centre and another project that sees $1.4 million in
 hydro electricity generated at the Fleet Street
 pumping station using a natural drop in elevation.
 The power is used in pumps that send drinking water
 across a large portion of the city.
 Ken Thompson is an engineer who chaired the
 selection panel that helped choose Ottawa for the
 award.
 He said other municipalities are doing similar
 things
 on the energy conservation front, but Ottawa has
 taken a more large- scale and detailed approach to
 the
 issue.
 It's unique, he said. They've really taken a
 serious
 approach to managing electricity, and they have been
 innovative enough to make things work quite well.
 The detailed information on, and management of,
 energy consumption at the sewage treatment plant is
 staggering.
 At the click of a computer mouse, workers can check
 exactly how much electricity the plant is using, how
 much it's producing, and how much it is taking from
 the grid. Another click can ramp up power produced
 by the engines, bring on more supply from diesel
 generators, or pull more from the grid. It's even
 possible to tell if a major component is pulling
 more
 or less power than it should.
 Mr. McCartney said the idea for the system was his,
 but it took Mr. Robertson and a crew of engineers to
 design the system.
 The methane is produced by bacteria in airless
 digesters as they eat biosolids in the sewage. The
 gas
 is captured and sent to a building housing the
 engines, which roar around the clock and each
 produce enough electricity in an hour to power an
 average house for a month. The electricity is then
 put
 on the plant's internal grid.
 Coolant from the engines is sent to an exchanger and
 the heat is transferred to the plant's water boiler
 heating system.
 Not letting anything go to waste, the boiler system
 water is then passed through the engines' searing
 exhaust system to be heated up further.
 Mr. McCartney said the system is working so well
 that several other municipalities have sent people
 to
 check it out.
 It's been done before, but never as successfully as
 we have, Mr. Robertson said. It feels nice to get
 the
 award. When it paid for itself so quickly, we knew
 we were on to something.
 If the two energy creating projects didn't exist,
 property taxes would have to increase .3 per cent to
 buy more power, and this is something that is not
 lost
 on Ottawa's new mayor.
 I think these guys are municipal heroes, Mr.
 O'Brien said.