Detroit Edison Offers Details On Landfill Gas Project
Detroit Edison will expand its renewable energy portfolio with a landfill gas project to be built in Kimball Township at the Smiths Creek Landfill.
Detroit Edison will purchase 3.2 megawatts of electricity produced at the landfill from Blue Water Renewables Inc., a subsidiary of DTE Biomass Energy. The power purchase agreement was approved last week by the Michigan Public Service Commission.
The Smith's Creek Landfill, owned and operated by St. Clair County, operates one of the first commercial-scale septage injection landfill gas systems in the United States. In this system, material extracted from septic tanks is applied to the landfill to speed the decomposition of organic waste. This process not only increases the life of the landfill, but also increases the rate of landfill gas generation used to fuel electricity production.
About 75 construction jobs will be created for the plant, which will produce enough electricity to power 3,000 homes. The project is expected to be operational late this year.
The Smiths Creek Landfill project also incorporates an education center to allow schools and community groups to learn about environmentally responsible means of waste disposal, as well as using renewable landfill gas to power electricity generation.
The power purchase agreement is part of Detroit Edison's efforts to expand the company's renewable energy resources. To meet the state's renewable energy mandate, Detroit Edison expects to add about 1,200 MW of renewable power. The utility plans to provide 10 percent of its power from renewable resources by 2015, the minimum requirement of that mandate. Detroit Edison plans to own plants to supply up to half of that power and contract with third-party producers for the rest.
Detroit Edison expects the majority of its renewable energy to come from wind resources, but the utility also has two solar energy pilot programs that could produce approximately 20 MW. The utility's renewable energy capacity under contract is now nearly 4 percent of total generation.
Detroit Edison is an investor-owned electric utility serving 2.1 million customers in Southeastern Michigan and a subsidiary of DTE Energy (NYSE: DTE), a Detroit-based diversified energy company involved in the development and management of energy-related businesses and services nationwide. More at www.dteenergy.com.
Ann Arbor-based DTE Biomass Energy, a subsidiary of DTE Energy, has built and operates more than 25 plants across the United States that convert landfill gas, or methane, emitted from decomposing landfill refuse into energy such as electricity and steam. These projects recover millions of cubic feet of methane per day, preventing its escape into the atmosphere, where it is considered to be a greenhouse gas. More at www.dtebe.com.