Santa Barbara County, Calif., Approves $110M Project at Tajiguas Landfill

The anaerobic digestion facility has a design capacity of up to 73,600 tons of organic waste per year.

Waste360 Staff, Staff

December 15, 2016

1 Min Read
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Santa Barbara County, Calif., is moving ahead with a plan to build an anaerobic digestion facility and operations to help it recover and process recyclables at the Tajiguas Landfill.

The MRF would sort municipal solid waste coming into the facility while the anaerobic digestion facility would turn organic waste into biogas. The MRF has a design capacity of up to 250,000 tons of waste per year. The anaerobic digestion facility has a design capacity of up to 73,600 tons of organic waste per year.

KCLU.org has more:

The project has been in development for more than six years. It’s intended to increase the county’s recycling rate to more than 85%, as well as extending the life of the landfill on the Gaviota coast. An Anaerobic Digestion Facility will process organic materials, and allow methane and carbon dioxide to be converted into electricity. It’s estimated the process will reduce carbon dioxide pollution by about 110,000 metric tons a year.

The Tajiguas project is a public-private partnership with MSB Investors of San Luis Obispo, which will design and build the facility. Work will begin next March, with the facility expected to be online in 2019.

Read the full story here.

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