Friday, April 6, 2012

Getting a Green Light in Allentown


A three-year battle has finally paid off for Delta Thermo Energy and its supporters as the Allentown City Council voted to approve a $35 million, 38,000 square-foot facility on the Little Lehigh Creek.

More than 450 people showed up to hear the city council's
decision on Mar. 8. Courtesy: Lehigh Valley Live.
City council voted 4-2 in favor of the waste-to-energy plant after having been rejected due to a 3-3 deadlock the previous month. Councilwoman Cynthia Mota changed her vote after visiting the pilot plant in Egg Harbor Township, N.J.

Allentown will sign a 35-year contract with Delta Thermo Energy, which will build and operate a facility adjacent to the wastewater treatment center. The city will pay $5.88 million per year, with annual increases, to Delta Thermo, a New Jersey-based developer that utilizes a combination of technologies presently in Germany and Japan. The technology converts trash and sewage sludge into a clean, coal-like substance that can be burned to create electricity. The end product is what distinguishes this process from gasification, which creates a syngas.

In return, the city will get electricity, an energy credit, and most importantly stability in price increases. This prevents Allentown from being at the mercy of landfill owners who can choose to raise prices. The facility will be cheaper than continuing to truck garbage to landfills. A last minute request gives the city an opportunity to opt out of the contract after 10 years. The plant should be operational by 2015.

The project is largely a result of the labors of Marcel Groen, a partner at Fox Rothschild LLP, and Delta Thermo Energy’s lawyer. The former chairman of the Montgomery County Democratic Party contacted his friend, Allentown Mayor Ed Pawlowski in 2009 and the two have spent the last two years trying to make the proposed plant a reality.

An earlier deal was close to being signed before the city decided to invite other companies to submit bids on the project in February 2011. The delay cost Delta Thermo $31 million in tax-exempt bonds from the Pennsylvania Economic Development Finance Agency, but the company insists it is back on track to financing the project.

Better BTU Take: We’re really interested in this project and hope it comes to fruition. Torrefaction is an interesting process and Delta Thermo’s plant would be unique in combining three technologies. It would be good for the industry to see one of these up and running and then compare to gasification facilities.

One note we’ll make is that we haven’t seen a single mention of permits. We’ve seen plenty of projects get tangled up in the permitting stage so we’ll be interested to see what happens.


More Information:
Allentown, Pa. Breaks Deadlock, Approves WTE Plant (Mar. 8, 2012) – Waste & Recycling News

Allentown Council Rejects Waste-to-Energy Plant (Feb. 15, 2012) – The Morning Call