SYSAV waste-to-energy plant

SYSAV

SYSAV's waste-to-energy plant in Malmo, Sweden
Official name Sysav South Scania Waste (Sydskånes avfallsaktiebolag)
Country Sweden
Location Malmö
Coordinates 55°37′47.7″N 13°02′45.9″E / 55.629917°N 13.046083°E / 55.629917; 13.046083Coordinates: 55°37′47.7″N 13°02′45.9″E / 55.629917°N 13.046083°E / 55.629917; 13.046083
Status Operational
Owner(s) SYSAV
Operator(s) SYSAV
Thermal power station
Primary fuel Municipal waste
Website
SYSAV (Swedish)

The SYSAV (Sysav South Scania Waste) waste-to-energy plant is a waste-to-energy plant in Malmö, Sweden, which treats waste from the southern province of Skåne. The plant is owned by fourteen local authorities in Skåne.[1] In 2008, a fourth unit was built alongside engineering consultancy Ramboll, making it is one of the largest waste-to-energy plants in Northern Europe.[2]

SYSAV's waste-to-energy plant.

Overview

The SYSAV waste-to-energy plant is the most energy efficient plant in Sweden, as well as being one of the advanced plants in the world. The plant includes four boilers, the first two of which began operation in 1973. The two advanced boilers, fitted in 2003 and 2008 respectively, are steam boilers that generate electricity and district heating.[3]

SYSAV also have various sites throughout the province of Skåne, which are used to process, sort, store and recycle waste. Specific examples include sorting bulky waste, composting, chipping wood, recovering metals and reloading. The sites were originally designed to be landfills, but only a small portion of the waste goes to landfill at two of the sites. The sites include facilities to process household and commercial waste, using waste combustion to recover energy, biological treatment, re-use, recycling and landfill. SYSAV also have a facility for dealing with hazardous waste.[4]

References

  1. "Waste-to-Energy Plant Sysav Malmö, enhancing the overall Energy Efficiency with 2 Unitop® 28C heat pump units" (PDF). Friotherm. Retrieved 1 February 2016. line feed character in |title= at position 57 (help)
  2. "Extension makes waste-to-energy plant one of the most efficient in Europe". Ramboll. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  3. "The Waste to Energy plant". SYSAV. Retrieved 1 February 2016.
  4. "Sysav’s waste sites for sorting, recycling and landfill". SYSAV. Retrieved 1 February 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.