Waste Management of Utah has announced plans to expand and improve its Salt Lake City recycling operations with the construction of a “new, larger and technically advanced” material recovery facility (MRF).
“Waste Management remains committed to supporting sustainability, and recycling is an important component,” says Scott Bradley, vice president for Waste Management’s Four Corners area. “To ensure our local recovery operations can keep pace with the volume of recyclable materials being generated by the growing communities in and around Salt Lake City, Waste Management identified a very real need to improve our local recycling operations.”
The new MRF will support recycling programs throughout the Salt Lake Valley, including processing the recycling for the municipality of Salt Lake City’s roughly 41,000 residential customers.
“Having this facility located in Salt Lake City, for the benefit of our residents and businesses, truly reflects our culture and commitment to recycling as a city,” Salt Lake City Mayor Jackie Biskupski says. “Waste Management’s commitment to upgrade its MRF helped secure our long-term public-private partnership. This project will offer economic development; shorter travel times for our recycling trucks resulting in lower emissions; and a more efficient and cost-effective recycling operation that is responsive both to our sustainability goals and to our future population growth.”
Waste Management of Utah plans to invest $16 million to bring the new MRF online. The facility will occupy 50,000 square feet of an existing structure at the company’s transfer station. Once operational, the MRF will be capable of processing and sorting 35 tons of material per hour, which is more than 700 tons of recyclables per day.
“State-of-the-art equipment with advanced sorting technologies will be installed at the new MRF,” explains Mark Snedecor, area director of recycling operations for Waste Management. “Our goal is to improve production efficiencies and reduce contamination levels in the materials we produce. By modernizing our operations, we expect to meet and exceed the increased quality standards being imposed by domestic and international buyers of the metals, plastics, cardboard
Machinery with improved automation capabilities, advanced sorting optics
Waste Management services Salt Lake City’s robust recycling program, processing approximately 750 tons of recyclables per month. The municipality diverts more than 40 percent of its residential waste stream to recycling and compost. The modernized MRF will support this effort by producing a cleaner end product with higher value, which will ultimately lead to greater diversion from the landfill.
“We’re interested in everything we can do to support more recycling and higher diversion rates,” says Lance Allen, director of Salt Lake City’s waste and recycling division. “We look forward to working with Waste Management to improve recycling operations, raise the performance benchmarks for our community and continue to educate the public on proper recycling practices.”
The new MRF will remain a single-stream operation that accepts and sorts clean metal cans, plastic bottles
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