Landfill biogases will be converted into natural gas under a company's plans to build a new facility — the first of its kind in the state — at the Pine Bend landfill in Inver Grove Heights.
The plant, approved by the City Council on Monday, will be built and run by Fortistar, a White Plains, N.Y.-based investment firm that provides capital to build and manage companies that create "green" energy sources. It is one of about 70 such facilities nationwide.
Republic Services, which owns the Pine Bend Sanitary Landfill, will lease Fortistar the land for the 12,000-square-foot facility. The renewable natural gas plant is expected to be operational by March 2022.
"This technology is new to Minnesota, but not to the rest of the country," said Aaron Janusz, environmental manager for Republic Services, which owns the landfill. "These types of facilities have been in operation for several years."
As landfill waste decomposes, it produces biogas, which is about 50% methane. Once the biogas is collected, the plant will treat it, stripping out everything else so it's pure methane, and send it into the Xcel Energy pipeline. It will then be used to fuel a fleet of trucks at Pine Bend that run on compressed natural gas, a Fortistar spokesman said.
Jonathan Maurer, managing director at Fortistar, said the company has built five such facilities and has three more in the works in Ohio, Florida and now Inver Grove Heights, and helped improve the technology behind it.
"This is a tried-and-true process," he said.
There's been increasing demand for this kind of biofuel both by Congress and by companies interested in reducing their carbon footprint, he said.