학술논문

Techno-Economic Evaluation of Waste To Energy (WtE) Plant
Document Type
Conference
Source
2023 IEEE 11th Region 10 Humanitarian Technology Conference (R10-HTC) Humanitarian Technology Conference (R10-HTC), 2023 IEEE 11th Region 10. :500-507 Oct, 2023
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Engineering Profession
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Signal Processing and Analysis
Waste management
Waste materials
Technological innovation
Toxicology
Electricity
Focusing
Production
Municipal Solid Waste
Refuse Derived Fuel
Waste to Energy
Language
ISSN
2572-7621
Abstract
Human activities inevitably results in waste. Generated Municipal solid waste (MSW) simply collected and dumped which causes environmental problems and health hazards. Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) - A bio-fuel obtained from dry residue of waste. Conversion of MSW to RDF substitutes fossil fuels, reduces burden of land filling, reduction in emission, volume reduction of MSW, hygiene etc. Waste to Energy (WtE) plant evaluated by plant visit, data collection, sample collection and literature review. Detailed analysis has been carried out of MSW, RDF, Fly Ash, Bottom Ash and stack emission sample. MSW processed by mechanical processes as manual segregation, splitting, shredding, magnetic separation and air density separation to prepare RDF which shows upgradation in properties for utilization as fuel. 1 MT of MSW processed to yield RDF 0.6-0.65 MT. Characteristics of RDF shows calorific value-2684 kcal/kg, moisture content-26 % and ash content-24 %. WtE plant designed to process 400 TPD MSW to generate power at 9 MWH rating. The company has signed a power purchase agreement at INR 7.07/kw. Cost benefit analysis carried out considering capital investment, term loan, interest rate, manpower cost, raw material cost, fixed cost, processing cost etc. Comparison of strengths & opportunities with weakness & threats in (SWOT) analysis makes project interesting in waste management and energy sector. The economic evaluation shows Cost Benefit ratio (CBR)- 1.83, Internal Rate of Return (IRR)- 13.09 % and Net Present Value (NPV)- 9.41 crore which means project is viable and positive. Results from this study will support policy makers and local authorities to decide, design and develop approaches for resource and energy recovery from MSW.