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Media Contacts:
Bill Brennan, 527-6928
Mark Matsunaga, 527-5767
Metal Recycling Pilot Project Begins At Landfill
Operators of the Waimanalo Gulch Landfill will begin a two-month pilot
project to recover metal from the waste stream as part of the City's efforts
to expand recycling and stretch the life of the landfill.
The 60-day project begins this week. Waste Management Hawaii, which operates
the City landfill under contract, will use a large electromagnet to remove
ferrous metals from the incoming solid waste. The metal will be hauled to
Schnitzer Steel in Campbell Industrial Park for recycling.
"If this pilot project works the way we expect, this will become a permanent
program," said Mayor Mufi Hannemann. "Not only will it save rapidly
dwindling space in our only municipal landfill, but it will also improve our
efforts to move Oahu toward the 21st Century Ahupua'a concept of
sustainability. We will be recovering discarded metal for reuse, rather than
simply burying it."
The City already recovers metal from the H-POWER garbage-to-energy plant,
where much of Oahu's solid waste is burned to generate electricity. However,
the pilot project will recover metal that goes directly to the landfill,
primarily from the City's refuse convenience stations and bulky item pickup.
Recycling steel saves material and energy that would otherwise be consumed
to produce new steel, Hannemann noted.
After the 60-day pilot project ends, Waste Management Hawaii and the City
Department of Environmental Services will evaluate the results.
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