1. Controlling the Energy Cost
through a
Waste Strategy Plan
Gordon Walker
EnvironmentalManager
Northern Powergrid
Ethan O’Brien
Carbon Management Advisor
Cory Riverside Energy
2. Controlling energy costs through
deployment of a waste strategy
Gordon Walker
Environmental Manager
22 November 2017PUBLIC
5. Key Facts
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The volume of
fluid in millions
of litres in our
network
45
The investment
in £m made on
average per year
on our network
300
The weight (in
tonnes) of waste
broughtto our four
permitted sites in
2016
2,760The number of
depots and
offices we
operate in 9
zones
28
The number of
fleet vehicles we
operate
814
6. Caring for the Environment
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Northern Powergrid are committedto promoting environmental
protection, best practice, and legal compliance amongst all staff.
We take our environmental responsibilities seriously and have
developed targets and objectives to help manage the environmental
impact of our activities. These include;
Water and land pollution,
Waste recycling,
The impact of noise and visual amenity,
The care of local wildlife & ecosystems,and
Our carbon footprint.
7. Strategy Development
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Some Key Objectives
•Reduce fluid
loss by 15%
•Reduce our business
carbon footprint by
10%
•Reduce noise and
visual amenity
•Minimise sulphur
hexafluoride(SF6)
losses
•Underground
around100 km
of overhead line
in AONB
•Reduce waste
to landfillby
10%
9. What About Energy?
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But, how can a waste strategy effectenergy cost or use?
Think about it like this –
If products are manufactured using recycled materials, then the need for virgin
materials is reduced along with the resulting energy required to extract and
process them in the first place.
Although the amount of energy saved by recycling will vary depending on the
type and volume of material recycled, almost all recycling processes will save
significant amounts of energy when compared againstprocesses that use virgin
materials.
10. Putting it in Context
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An example that is widely cited is the recycling of aluminium drink cans:
When you recycle aluminium drink cans, you save 95% of the energy required to
make the same amount of aluminium from its virgin source, bauxite.
So, by recycling just one tonne of aluminium drink cans, you conserve more
than 207 million Btu - which is the equivalent of 36 barrels of oil or roughly
1,665 gallons of diesel (7,559 litres).
PS – In case you are wondering, you’ll need around 60,000 drink cans to make
one tonne!
11. Understanding Waste
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So, what if you don’t happen to have 60,000 used drink cans lying around…
We didn’t, so we had to determine what our waste streams and volumes were;
• We asked simple questions – Who, What, When, Where, Why and How with
regard to all of our wastestreams.
• Then we cross referenced these to things we could do with waste, such as
create it, store it, transport it, reduce it, recycle it, reuse it, dispose of it and
so on.
12. Understanding Waste
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We reviewed this data againstsome base parameters:
• We wanted to keep all resources in use for as long as possible so we could
extract maximum value from them before having to do something
alternative with them.
• Once the materials were at the end of their useful life we wanted to recover
or regenerate the materials where we could, somehow.
• Once all known alternatives were exhausted (within economic limits) then,
and only then, we would accept landfill as the wastes final fate.
13. Making Diversity Work
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Integrated waste managementinvolves a mix of several waste management
approaches, depending upon the prevailing economic and environmental
conditions – including source reduction, incineration, composting, recycling, re-
use and ultimately landfill.
• As our waste was diverse in terms of number of waste streams and volumes
(largely outside of our control) we opted to use an integrated waste
managementapproach for each of our waste streams so they could be
managed individually rather than as a group. See Over...
15. Who needs drink cans?
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The percentage
of waste
diverted from
landfill in 2016
99.2
The average
number of
tonnes of oily
rags recycled
every year.
5The number of
waste service
providers we use
to manage our
waste locally
11 The percentage
of oil that is fully
recycled and put
back in our
network
100
The number of
tonnes of waste
recycled or
reused in 2016
2,738
16. It Doesn’t Stop There!
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Whilst we do the upfront segregationand management of waste on site, that
isn’t quite the end of its journey.
• As with many organisations our office and black bag type waste go to MRF
facilities for detailedsorting and recoveryoff site.
So at that point it seems appropriate for me to hand you over to Ethan who
can tell you more about this...
17. ‘No Waste from Waste’
Controlling energy costs through waste strategies
Ethan O Brien – Energy and CarbonAdvisor EMEX: 22/11/2017
18. A UNIQUE OPERATION ON THE RIVER THAMES
160,000 homes powered
1 million tonnes of waste
and aggregate
Serving London for
over 120 years
19. • Reinforce our river heritage and
low carbon route for the transport
of waste and bulk materials
• Committed to enabling recycling
• Generating energyand materials
from truly residual waste
• No waste from waste - no waste
to landfill or exported
OUR VISION
20. • Resource productivity and energy efficiency are at the heart of our
operations
ENERGY FROM WASTEAND RESOURCE PRODUCTIVITY
• Up to 250k tonnes of ash
recycled as construction
aggregate
• Used to widen 5 junctions of M25
motorway
• Up to 10k tonnes of Air Pollution
Control Residue creates building
blocks
• Certified as carbon negative
bricks – take carbon out of air
BIN TO BRICKRUBBISH TO ROAD
22. INSIGHT 1: Build on historical successes.
• Industry leading track record of using
systems to successfully manage health,
safety and environment
Structured approach
Philosophy is continuousimprovement
• Workingtowards international best
practice standard for energy management
– ISO 50001
SUSTAINABILITY IN PRACTICE
23. INSIGHT 2: Keep the measurement and message simple.
SUSTAINABILITY IN PRACTICE
Our holistic solution
• 200 kg of carbon saved per tonne of waste
vs landfill
• 9 times the amount of energy generated per
tonne of waste vs landfill
• 100,000 lorry movements avoided due to
use of the river
See: http://www.coryenergy.com/carbon-efficiency/less-carbon/
24. INSIGHT 3: Message becomes the mission.
• Sustainability goals become aligned with the overarching mission:
SUSTAINABILITY IN PRACTICE
Sustainability Goals Our Mission
• Energy efficiency
• Driving resource productivity
• Maximising generation of energy and
recycled by-products
• Sustainable growth
25. INSIGHT 4: Focus on always being better.
• Develop ‘Energy Management Route-Map’
Aligned to what our business is trying to
achieve, implemented by our people
Milestones fixed firmly on the future
Innovative and adding value
A collaborative environment where the best
answers win
SUSTAINABILITY IN PRACTICE
26. “You can only manage what you measure”
– and COMMUNICATE CLEARLY.
29. Waste and energy challenge us to think outside the box’.
1. How can energy managers keep driving change and continue to be
better?
Achieve business clarity on direction of travel by getting message right;
Framing resource and energy productivity as strategically important,linked to increase business
productivity,growth and competitive advantage;
Don’t be afraid to fail;
Collaboration – solutions are decentralised across sectors;
Holding policy-makers to account.Both industry and governmenthave a role to play.
• 2. How do you drive behavioural change?
– Answer – Reinforcement,communication,morecommunication,change style of communication,reward and
encouragement,demonstrate benefits – sell,sell up and add on.
• 3. What are the barriers associated with implementing a waste strategy?
– Answer – Current contracts,procurement or operations strategy not aligned with waste strategy,cost,
executive buy-in,service provider limitations.
• 4. How do you bring a business case to life?
– Answer –Try to get buy-in,put the business case into different terms. Don’t try to make waste sexy,
demonstrate other‘sexier’benefits (safety, operational,financial etc.),use data to tell the story,link to other
businesses success stories.