PROPOSED ENERGY FROM WASTE FACILITY

Jerrara Power is proposing to develop, build and operate energy from waste facilities on the Eastern Seaboard of Australia.

Residual waste, not suitable for recycling, would be sourced locally and from surrounding areas and transported to the facility where the waste would be thermally processed at high temperatures using a grate combustion technology.

The heat from combustion would boil water to create steam. The steam will drive a turbine connected to a generator to produce electricity. This power would be used to power homes and businesses.

Once fully operational, a facility would create an average of 30 megawatts of power per annum. This is enough electricity to power around 43,000 homes (based on an average residential home in NSW using 5,100kWh per year[1]).

[1] Monitoring the Electricity Retail Market 2019–2020, Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal

Indicative energy from waste facility proposed by Jerrara Power

Indicative facility diagram edit for web
Waste delivery and storage

1 Delivery hall
2 Waste bunker
3 Waste crane

Combustion and boiler

4 Feed hopper
5 Ram feeder
6 HZI moving grate
7 Superheater
8 Economiser
9 Primary air
10 Secondary air
11 Five-pass boiler

Flue gas treatment

12 Activated carbon silo
13 HZI SemiDry sorption process
14 Fabric filter
15 Induced draught fan
16 Silencer
17 Stack (emits CO2 and steam)
18 Selective Non-Catalytic Reduction

Energy recovery

19 Feed water system
20 Turbine
21 Air-cooled condenser
22 Transformer
23 Electrical power generation

Residue handling and treatment

24 Bottom ash extractor
25 Boiler and fly ash extraction
26 Bottom ash treatment plant
27 Residue silos

Fast facts

Waste conversion

Energy from waste (also known as waste to energy) is the conversion of residual waste into energy using a thermal process

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Proven Technology

Energy from waste is a proven technology with hundreds of facilities in production across North America, Europe, the Middle East and Asia

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Diverting Waste

Energy from waste processes residual waste, not suitable for recycling, that would otherwise end up in landfill 

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Power generation

Energy from waste can generate reliable baseload electricity to power homes and businesses

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Emissions Profile

Energy from waste has a superior emissions profile – displacing carbon dioxide (CO 2) emissions from coal-fired electrical generation and reducing greenhouse gas emissions from landfill

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Job creation

The plant would create 300 direct construction jobs and 60 full-time ongoing jobs

Frequently asked questions

Overview

The details

The environment

The community

Construction

Operations

The planning and assessment process 

Useful links

NSW Planning Major Projects site

NSW Energy from Waste Policy

Energy from Waste Infrastructure Plan

NSW Chief Scientist Energy from Waste Report

Government response to the NSW Chief Scientist Energy from Waste report

2018 National Waste Policy

Hitachi Zosen Inova (technology provider)

Kwinana Waste to Energy project

East Rockingham Waste to Energy project

QLD Energy from Waste Policy

QLD Planning Framework

Energy from Waste Around the World