1st phase revised guam proposal use it
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Guam’s Waste Reduction & Conversion System
Converts waste into energy. It is customized system that will be builtwith proven state of the art technology to be used for your solidwaste. The Waste Reduction & Conversion System has beencertified by the EPA and exceeds all clean emissions requirementlevels.
Presented by: One Water - J4F Conglomerate
An American Company, specializing in helping you, solve your Solid Waste problem. We are bringing a new Paragon for Energy and Waste Management. An Innovative Solution Technology that can covert most of your solid waste into energy. One Water-J4F Conglomerate is based on the Island of Hawaii with over 50 years of experience in the Environmental Industry which entails Waste Management, Technology Engineering, Strategic Marketing, Planning and Financing in the hopes of salvaging Guam’s Solid Waste problem.
One Water-J4F Conglomerate
PROJECTED POPULATION GROWTH
According to the 2010 U.S. Census, Guam had a population of 159,358, representing a relatively small
increase of 2.9 percent from the population of 154,805 reported in the 2000 Census (U.S. Census
Bureau,, 2012).
In 2006, the DOD announced a military project, referred to on Guam as the “Buildup.” Thousands of DOD
military and civilian personnel will be relocated from Okinawa, Japan to the island, leading to an increase
of space needed for the disposal of solid waste on land. In order to accurately predict how the WRC
system will benefit the limited space available for disposal, population growth estimates were developed
for the baseline year 2012 and milestone planning years 2015, 2020, 2025 and 2030 using the following
information:
• An induced population growth due to the relocation of 5,000 U.S. Marines from Okinawa to Guam;
• A predicted stable growth rate of .29% annually plus the Military Buildup induced population increase
years 2014 through 2024; and
• A stabilized growth rate of 0.29% annually using the projected 2024 population base for years 2025though 2030.
SOLID WASTE QUANTITY ESTIMATES
The tracking of disposal volumes began in earnest on Guam only recently.
• In 2012, Guam disposed of approximately 90,000 tons solid waste at the Layon Landfill.
• Approximately 70% of that waste disposed of at the Layon Landfill came from non-residential sources, and
the remaining 30% was from residential sources (Anderson, 2013).
• Measurement reporting of the volume of construction & demolition waste and green waste hauled to hard fills available to the public on Guam is less well-defined.
THE PROBLEM THAT GUAM IS FACING
Layon Landfill Excluded waste material Banned Waste
• The only Landfill for the entire Island, highly control for non-
hazardous municipal solid waste.• Special Waste disposed only by
approval or by appointment.
• Card board boxes, green tree trimmings and much more. waste are not accepted at Residential Transfer Station.
• Petroleum Waste, Construction demolition Waste & much more are excluded from Hauler Transfer Station.
• Municipal Solid Waste
• Household & Commercial Waste
• Construction & Biomedical Waste
• Manufactured Hydrocarbons
• Plus more………..
OUR GOAL
To help solve Guam’s most urgent waste problem!
Our Solution Waste = Energy
Guam’s Waste Reduction & Conversion System
The Carbonization ProcessClean Emissions below EPA levels!
• Can convert 75-98% of material processed with nearly no organic residue.
• Process high yield of Synfuel, Syngas & commercial carbons
• Capability to process 1-9 tons/hr to 500 tons/day or 10 millions gallon of fuel a year.
• The most efficient, clean and fiscally responsible answers to
reducing the waste and carbon emissions created by our
modern society while producing valuable Carbon, Activated
Carbon, Clean Energy and Synthetic Fuels, which can be used
for energy producing applications.
• backed by over 30 years of research and development in state-
of-the-art energy technology labs and full size operations.
Other WRC Benefits
WRC’S ability to convert virtually any carbon solid offers additional societal benefits and choices such as;• Reducing landfill needs• Increasing the diversity of clean fuel sources• Increasing energy production and management choices
Reducing green house gas emissions: a ton of biomass processed by WRC instead of composting prevents the emission of 3.5 tons of carbon monoxide, 1.33 tons of methane, and 400 lb. of nitrous oxide.
PROJECTED BENEFITS
$1348.00
$11,106.00
$55,530.00
$222,120.00
$2,665,440.00
WRC Bio Products
(Carbon, Syn Diesel, Syngas, Inorganic, Electricity)
Year
Month
Week
Day
Hour
Conservatively Based On 8 Tons A Day
Maintaining Guam’s Lustrous Beauty
One Water-J4F Project Team
David LouisPresidentStrategic Service Management
Scott PetersonPresidentSolid Waste Management
Earl ShookEnvironment Consultant
Falefitu RobertsonStrategic Marketing /Finance
Contact Phone: 800-256-3610
Web site:www.j4fconsultants.com
One Water – J4F Conglomerate
Would like to thank you in advanced for giving us an opportunity to introduced you to the system that can be used to solve your waste problem immediately.
We are looking forward in working with you in the near future. For further questions, contact information at 808-277-1669.
May God bless the leaders, officials and the people of Guam.