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Energy-from-Waste … part of the solution October 1, 2008. About Covanta. Covanta Overview. Covanta is the world’s largest Energy-from-Waste company Operate in 8 countries and 15 states throughout the U.S. Headquarters in Fairfield, New Jersey More than 3,000 employees worldwide
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Energy-from-Waste … part of the solution October 1, 2008
Covanta Overview • Covanta is the world’s largest Energy-from-Waste company • Operate in 8 countries and 15 states throughout the U.S. • Headquarters in Fairfield, New Jersey • More than 3,000 employees worldwide • Provider of long-term renewable energy and environmentally safe waste disposal • Recipient of numerous state and federal awards for safety and environmental excellence
Financial Strength Covanta Market Capitalization ($Billion) • NYSE Company (CVA) • Enterprise value exceeds $6 billion • Revenue exceeds $1.4 billion • 2008 Financial Guidance(1) • $550 - 575 million adjusted EBITDA • $380 - 420 million cash flow from operations (1) As of April 24, 2008. This information is not being reaffirmed or updated as of the current date.
Annual U.S Renewable Generation = 87,213,000 megawatt hrs Annual U.S Waste Generation = 388,000,000 Tons Source: US Department of Energy, Energy Information Administration 2005 Report Source: 2004 Joint Study by Biocycle and Earth Engineering Center of Columbia University Energy from Waste - Vital roll in U.S.Renewable Energy and Waste Management • Covanta owns and/or operates 38 Energy from Waste facilities and 6 biomass to electric facilities with many more in planning and development • Covanta produces almost 10% of America’s non-hydro renewable electricity – enough to power over a million homes • Covanta converts over 5% of the nation’s post-recycled waste into energy
Environmental Health and Safety Programs • 24 Facilities in OSHA’s elite VPP STAR Program • Covanta’s Alexandria facility received the VPP STAR award and our Fairfax facility has been recommended for the VPP STAR as well. • Environmental Leadership • 23 EPA performance track facilities • First to install mercury control • New patented low NOx technology • Numerous industry, environmental, and community awards • Virginia Environmental Excellence • Sustainable Florida Leadership • Michigan Clean Corporate Citizen
Clean Energy from Waste EfW is a specially designed energy generation facility that uses household waste as fuel. Waste is combusted to produce valuable energy and help solve some of society’s big challenges • Population growth • Climate change • Dependence on fossil fuels • Resource management Safe, reliable waste disposal Reduces greenhouse gas emissions Clean, renewable electricity 24/7 Recover metal for recycling Municipal Solid Waste (MSW): 2000 lbs Power: 560 kWh Metal: 50 lbs Ash: 10% of original volume
Landfill Recycling/ Composting EfW EfW roll in Global Waste Management EfW 0.2 billion tonsRecycling 0.5 billion tonsLandfill 1.0 billion tons U.S. ~ 90 EfW facilities ~ 30 million TPY Western Europe ~ 400 EfW facilities ~ 65 million TPY Asia ~ 325 EfW facilities ~ 55 million TPY
The I/95 Energy/Resource Recovery Facility in Fairfax County • Began commercial operation in 1990 • Processes approximately 3,000 tons of MSW each day while producing more than 90 megawatts of renewable energy • Service Agreement Deal – Client delivers waste and pays Covanta an O&M fee to operate the facility • In 2000, completed CAAA retrofit of the facility to lower emission and meet new Federally enforced air emission guidelines
The I/95 Energy/Resource Recovery Facility in Fairfax County • All debt is paid off in 2011. • The facility provides 13.7% of Virginia’s Renewable Power (22% excluding Hydro). • Since 1990, the facility has: • Produced 10 million MWhs for the region— enough to power 75,000 homes each year • Safely disposed of approximately 19M tons of MSW, avoiding the use of 19M barrels of oil • Recycled 375,000 tons of Ferrous metal and 3,500 tons of Non-Ferrous metals
The Alexandria/Arlington Resource Recovery Facility • Began commercial operation in 1988 • Processes 975 tons of MSW a day while generating up to 23 megawatts of renewable energy • Tip Fee Deal – Client pays a tip fee ($/ton) on all jurisdiction tonnage (2/3 of plant volume) • In 2000, Covanta completed a $40M CAAA retrofit of the facility to lower emission and meet new Federally enforced air emission guidelines
The Alexandria/Arlington Resource Recovery Facility • In 2007, installed a new ferrous separation system for metal recycling • All debt is paid off in 2013 • Provides enough energy to power 20,000 homes each year • Since 1988, the facility has: • Produced 4 million MWhs for the region- enough to power 20,000 homes each year • Safely disposed of approximately 7,000,000 tons of MSW, avoiding the use of 7,000,000 Barrels of oil
Alexandria Upgrade Stellar Emission Results Actual vs. Allowable Emissions
EfW - Benefits to the Local VA Host Communities • Long Term Stable Waste Disposal Pricing • Clean Renewable Power – Less Demand for Fossil Fuel Power (Oil & Coal) • Recycling: • Recycling Credits: Ferrous and Non-Ferrous Metals Recovery • NOx Credits • Reduces - Landfill Usage and Greenhouse Gases • Minimize Truck Traffic • Community Relations Programs / Charitable Contributions • Provides Local Employment – approximately 135 jobs • More than $3M spent on local businesses annually
Recycling Rates • EfW plants work together with community’s recycling program. • Fairfax County - 35% • Alexandria - 29% (5% inc. in 07 – Fe Metal) • Arlington - 42.7% • Commonwealth of Virginia – 32.2%* * 2005 data
The Best Option After Recycling—Energy-from-Waste Landfills Renewable energy generated from landfills - 6 billion kWh 250 milliontons of garbage dumped in landfills A misuse of valuable land; generates methane gas – a leading contributor to global warming; inefficient energy recovery Energy-from-Waste Renewable energy generated from EfW facilities - 15 billion kWh 30 million tons of garbage is processed into renewable energy Preserves land; offsets greenhouse gases; provides energy recovery five times greater than landfill gas to energy For every ton of waste processed in an Energy-from-Waste facility, we offset one ton of carbon dioxide equivalent by reducing the amount of methane generated by landfills and decreasing our dependence on fossil fuels.
Environmental Benefits of Energy-from-WasteOne solution helps address 3 challenges • Adopting environmentally sustainable waste disposal practices • EfW is the most attractive, sustainable solution for waste disposal after recycling • Generating clean energy from renewable fuels • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency states EfW “produces electricity with less environmental impact than almost any other source” • Baseload power – 24 hours a day, 7 days a week • EfW can be important contributor to overall renewable portfolio • Potential to produce about 5% of U.S. electricity needs • Home grown electricity benefits energy security • Reducing greenhouse gas emissions to combat global warming • Offsets up to one ton of carbon dioxide equivalent for each ton of waste processed • Reduces need for landfills, which generate methane, a potent greenhouse gas • Reduces dependence on fossil fuel power: one ton of waste ~ ¼ ton of coal
EfW Regulatory & Policy Landscape United States • Recognized as renewable in 23 states and current Federal policy • Federal legislation – outcome uncertain • Renewable electricity tax credits currently included – likely extension • Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) and Climate Change being debated • Whether or not EfW should benefit from these policies is specifically being debated Europe • EU Landfill Directive – • 65% reduction in landfilling of biodegradable Municipal Solid Waste • Significant Landfill taxes & other incentives to recycle and recover energy • Not subject to CO2 emission caps China • Preferential electricity tariff • Target 30% EfW by 2030
Global Growth Opportunity in Energy-from-Waste • One billion tons/yr of waste buried in landfills EfW Opportunity • U.S. and Canada • EfW re-emerging with higher fossil fuel prices • Pending regulation on renewable energy and climate change will be the driver • Europe • EU Landfill Directive – significant impact on the U.K. in particular • Increasing demand for renewable power generation • Significant focus on Climate Change • China • Growing middle class and urbanization – increasing waste generation • Land at a premium, making landfills less attractive • Regulatory incentives for renewable power generation benefit EfW
Thank You Paul E. Stauder Senior Vice President Covanta America Pstauder@covantaenergy.com