Sludge Watch ==> Toronto Landfill in London Ont finalized - new home for sludge?
Maureen Reilly
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Tue Jan 2 11:51:54 EST 2007
Solid Waste & Recycling, 12/21/2006
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Toronto landfill deal finalized
Toronto's $220-million deal to buy the GreenLane Environmental landfill near
St. Thomas has been finalized after the details were gone over in a recent
meeting that lasted through the night.
Mayor David Miller says the purchase will provide secure disposal for the
city's garbage in the event the U.S.-Canada border ever closes. Toronto had
been searching for a secure destination for its garbage once its contract
with Republic Waste expires in 2010. (The waste is currently trucked to
Republic's Carleton Farms landfill in Michigan.)
The announcement that the deal is finalized was criticized by one city
council member who says that too little information has been provided to
judge the merits of the deal.
"There has been a deliberate initiative on behalf of staff and the mayor's
office to keep the details secret and to suppress the facts," Denzil
Minnan-Wong said. Without more details, he added, "no one can have a
meaningful debate."
The mayor insists that the landfill purchase is a fair deal, even though it
will be financed by borrowing. The city currently pays about $60 a tonne to
ship roughly 750,000 tonnes of garbage to Michigan. If the city had to
extend the contract 15 years (the expected life of the GreenLane site)
beyond 2010, that would cost the city $675-million.
The GreenLane facility is profitable. The city is contractually bound to
send most of its waste to Republic's Michigan landfill until 2010, so it
will collect the tip fees between now and then. It has some security for the
future, and the current contract does allow a small amount of waste to be
sent to disposal sites other than the Michigan landfill. Toronto will also
continue its aggressive waste diversion effort, in part to extend the life
of the landfill that it now owns.
"It is such a valuable asset, you don't want to fill it up," Mayor Miller
said. "The more you divert, the more you keep capacity for the future."
The "purchase and sale" agreement between Toronto and GreenLane was signed
in time to meet the previously agreed deadline of midnight Tuesday. A
$10-million down payment will be held in trust until the deal closes by
March 29.
More information about the Sludgewatch-l
mailing list