Sludge Watch ==> Myrtle Beach - no market for sludge compost - Big County debt
Maureen Reilly
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Thu Apr 5 09:40:08 EDT 2007
Sludgewatch Admin:
So this county got talked into sinking money into a sludge composting
operation, and is then stuck with a huge taxpayer bill when no one wants to
pay for sludge compost.
......................................................................................
Thu, Apr. 05, 2007
Negative returns on compost production a sticky problem
Georgetown County seeks out strategies for marketing sludge
By Aliana Ramos
The Sun News
TOM MURRAY/The Sun News
John Robinson, a front-end loader driver for the Georgetown Water and Sewer
District, spreads a load of aged sludge and yard waste at the Georgetown
County Landfill Regional Composting Facility on Tuesday as heat from the
decomposition process rises around him. The county's compost program has
been unexpectedly unprofitable.Georgetown County is spending $500,000 a year
to run a composting site that generates about $50,000 a year in revenue.
That's not the kind of return Georgetown County officials were hoping for
when they entered into an agreement with area sludge providers more than a
decade ago to fund sewer and wastewater improvements, County Councilman
Johnny Morant said.
"For a while it appeared that things were going fine. But somewhere it fell
flat," Morant said. "I don't think any of us imagined that it would be the
cost we have today. It never materialized to the extent we had hoped for."
But eliminating the costly composting operation is not an option under an
agreement the county signed in 1997 with the Town of Andrews, city of
Georgetown and the Georgetown County Water and Sewer District.
And getting rid of the composting site could cost the county about $480,000
a year to store the sludge, according to figures provided by Georgetown
County Public Works Director Ray Funnye.
Now, the county is looking at ways to make the operation more profitable.
Funnye has started meeting with marketing experts.
"We need tips to help us identify vendors and to help us learn how to close
the deal," Funnye said.
"We already have a marketing plan, but we need to expand it."
Compost can be used for landscaping projects, mulch, garden bed
establishment and erosion control. It can help to reduce soil-borne plant
diseases, it improves soil's water holding capacity and it improves drought
tolerance, according to the S.C. Department of Health and Environmental
Control.
Morant recommended conducting an analysis comparing the cost of the
Georgetown County composting system with other counties, to see whether they
are losing money to the same degree and to see what they do to help curtail
costs.
"Are they losing funds, or are we not marketing a product? Composting is a
business. I can't imagine someone being in that business unless there is
something to be gained from it," Morant said.
The Georgetown County Landfill generates about 6,000 tons of compost a year,
which is sold by the truckload for $25 a ton. The county's compost product,
called GeorgetownGreen, is certified by DHEC.
Horry County makes about 3,000 tons of compost a year and sells it for $10 a
ton. Last year, Horry's composting site made about $28,903, said Ricky
Hardee, executive director of the Horry County Solid Waste Authority.
"It's not a moneymaking business," Hardee said. "It's a convenience and a
service we provide to our residents and our customers. One thing to add to
that is that there are some savings that we get from keeping it out of the
landfill. There is some value to that, but it doesn't make the registers
ring."
Hardee points out that Horry's compost does not mix in sludge to make its
product, as Georgetown County does. "It's not comparing apples and apples."
Georgetown County's compost is only sold by the truckload. Funnye said the
county tried to sell the compost by the bagful a few years ago to residents
but said the program didn't work. "It just wasn't economically feasible," he
said.
He said he's now focusing on selling the product to businesses that can buy
compost in large quantities. He said the county already uses some of the
compost in its own public works projects, which helps to save the county
money.
If marketing efforts work and the county is able to sell all 6,000 tons of
compost, the county could potentially make $150,000.
Landfills elsewhere also make money through tipping fees, which is the money
that other governments, individuals or businesses pay to dump their waste in
the landfill. But under the 1997 agreement, the county is not allowed to
charge the town of Andrews, city of Georgetown, or the Georgetown County
Water and Sewer District tipping fees or any other fees to recover
maintenance, operation or capital improvement costs for processing the
sludge.
In return, Andrews, the city of Georgetown and the Georgetown County Water
and Sewer District agreed to pay for the construction and maintenance of a
new sewer interceptor and construction of a $2 million composting site to
accept biosolids or sludge, which is the leftover material processed at the
wastewater treatment plant.
The agreement also required improvements and expansions to the Georgetown
Wastewater Treatment Plant.
At the time it was considered a "win-win" situation, said Morant, who was
the county board chairman at the time.
The entities that were producing the sludge would give it to the county for
free, and the county would turn around and use the sludge to make compost
for sale. The profits from the sale of compost were then supposed to be used
to help defray some of the costs of the compost operations, Morant said.
He said Georgetown County has been looking at this issue for the past five
years.
"I do believe it's becoming a constant drain on the county," Morant said.
"You can't get rid of it, you have to look where you can cut out costs.
Whether they have maximized the alternatives, I do not know."
http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/myrtlebeachonline/17029818.htm
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