A Thermoselect high-temperature chamber. Photo courtesy: Interstate Waste Treatment. |
Thermoselect designs
large-scale partial-oxidation gasifiers. There are several plants in operation
across Japan including Chiba, Mutsu, Osaka, Tokushima, Kurashiki and Nagasaki.
Thermoselect is able to use MSW and industrial waste without sorting out metals
and other recyclables and produces a low-BTU syngas that is exported and used
in boilers and gas engines.
While the Japanese
company appears to have done very well for itself in the Pacific Rim, licensees
in Europe and America haven’t been as successful. A plant in Karlsruhe, Germany
shut down in 2004 after five years and the initial plant in Fondotoce, Italy
was also closed in the late ‘90s. Interstate Waste Management, based in
Malvern, Pa., has been working on developing a commercial plant in the United
States for several years but also hasn’t yet been successful.
So why has Thermoselect
worked in Japan and not elsewhere? It’s hard to say but Better BTU thinks cost
is a substantial part of the issue. Our information is that equipment costs run
well above $5,000 per installed kW. With Japan being an island, landfills are
limited and tipping fees are high. That coupled with high electricity costs
make the system more economical in the Land of the Rising Sun than it might be
elsewhere.
Better BTU Take:
Thermoselect rushed onto the scene with facilities cropping up all over in the
late 90’s but today only the plants in Japan remain. The massive cost
associated with these systems may lead Thermoselect the way of the computer
mainframe.
Thermoselect's Facility in Chiba, Japan. Courtesy of Thermoselect. |
For more on Thermoselect, visit http://www.thermoselect.com
For information on Interstate Waste Treatment, a Thermoselect licensee in the United States, visit http://www.iwtonline.com
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