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Ethiopia Builds Plant That Converts Trash To Energy

- May 05, 2019
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Reppie Waste-to-Energy Power Project plant in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. (Michael Tewelde, AFP)
Machinery claws transporting waste in the Reppie Waste-to-Energy Power Project plant in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. (Michael Tewelde, AFP)
In Ethiopia, its largest rubbish dump Koshe was for almost 50 years, home to hundreds of people who collect and resell rubbish trucked in from around the capital Addis Ababa. It, however, made headlines last year when it killed about 114 people, compelling the government to rethink an alternative use for the site which is said to be the size of 36 football pitches.
Ethiopia has since turned the site into a new waste-to-energy plant via the Reppie Waste-to-Energy Project which is the first of its kind in Afrika. This forms part of efforts to revolutionise waste management practices in the country.
This plant will also supply the people with 30 percent of their household electricity needs.
“The Reppie project is just one component of Ethiopia’s broader strategy to address pollution and embrace renewable energy across all sectors of the economy. We hope that Reppie will serve as a model for other countries in the region, and around the world,” Zerubabel Getachew, Ethiopia’s deputy permanent representative to the United Nations said in Nairobi last year.
The waste-to-energy incineration plant will burn the rubbish in a combustion chamber. The heat produced will be used to boil water until it turns to steam, which drives a turbine generator that produces electricity.
Waste-to-energy incineration is also vital for cities where land is in short supply, as apart from generating electricity, space will be saved and there is a substantial prevention of the release of toxic chemicals into groundwater, and reduction in the release of the greenhouse gas – methane – into the atmosphere.
The Reppie plant operates within the emissions standards of the European Union, as it contributes towards alleviating air pollution.
Waste-to-energy plants are already popular in Europe, as nearly 25 percent of municipal waste is incinerated.

In France alone, there are about 126 waste-to-energy plants, with Germany having 121 and Italy having 40.
The facility is built on the Koshe landfill site located on the outskirts of the capital Addis Ababa. It was launched in 2013 as a municipal solid waste incarceration plant.

Building of the waste-to-power plant began in 2014 at a cost of around $118m. The incinerated waste will generate steam which will then drive a turbine that produces electricity at a projected power of 25 megawatts per day.

It is supposed to take 1,400 tons of waste daily which figure comes up to about 80% of refuse generated by Addis Ababa. It will go on to supply the capital with 30% household electricity needs whiles conforming to global standards on air emissions.

It was built by Cambridge Industries Limited (CIL), British & Island with Chinese partner contractors. It also involved Danish consultants Ramboll. It was fully funded by government with the overall cost put at 2.6 billion birr.

https://news360.co.za/ethiopia-builds-africas-first-energy-plant-that-converts-trash-into-electricity/

https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.africanews.com/amp/2018/08/20/the-reppie-project-ethiopia-opens-africa-s-first-waste-to-energy-facility/

https://m.news24.com/Africa/News/ethiopia-opens-plant-to-turn-waste-into-energy-20180820-2

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