Tampa Bay Energy Summit Benefits of Waste to Energy. May 28, 2015

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Tampa Bay Energy Summit Benefits of Waste to Energy May 28, 2015

Star The Star Program is designed for exemplary worksites with comprehensive, successful safety and health management systems. Companies in the Star Program have achieved injury and illness rates at or below the national average of their respective industries. These sites are self-sufficient in their ability to control workplace hazards. Star participants are reevaluated every three to five years, although incident rates are reviewed annually. 2

Florida has 11 WTE Facilities, more than any other state Over the past 20 years, Covanta operated facilities in Florida have: Safely managed ~45 million tons of MSW Recovered over 670,400 tons of ferrous metal, enough to build 8 Golden Gate Bridges Recovered over 36,000 tons of non-ferrous metals, enough to make 2.5 billion aluminum cans 3

Covanta Holding Corporation (NYSE: CVA) World s Leading Waste-to-Energy (WTE) operator North America, Asia & Europe 4,000+ employees Operates 43 WTE Facilities Florida Employs ~ 475 people directly in the State Operate six WTE facilities 303 MW Hillsborough County WTE Facility (1800TPD) Lake County WTE Facility (528 TPD) Lee County WTE Facility (1836 TPD) Miami Dade WTE Facility (3000 TPD) Pasco County WTE Facility (1050 TPD) Pinellas County WTE Facility (3150 TPD) In-state generator of renewable electricity Enough to continuously power approximately 213,000 Homes Modern Energy-from-Waste 4

Job Creation Typical facility creates ~ 250 construction jobs (3 years) Energy Security Local renewable energy available 24/7 Fuel Diversity Price Stability Sustainable Waste Management Renewables only account for 2% of generation in FL 20+ year contracts with a CPI Escalator Follows EPA and EU waste hierarchy 500-750 kwhrs of Power ¼ ton of coal 1 barrel of oil 50 lbs of Recycled Metal One Ton of MSW Hillsborough County, FL Ash: 10% of Original Volume 5

Percent of Total Waste Treatment 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% Waste Management Practices Recycling & Composting WTE Landfill GHG Reductions driven by diversion of materials to recycling and WTE Diversion of MSW from landfills is result of Directives Waste sector has the largest % GHG reduction of any sector Trends demonstrate compatibility of WTE and recycling 0% 1995 2000 2005 2010 6

+ + = WTE recognized as a key GHG mitigation measure by the Nobel prizewinning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 7

Voluntary Market Credits: Lee County WTE Facility Expansion Credits Available Since 2007-300,000 tons Hillsborough County WTE Facility Expansion Credits Available Since 2010 150,000 tons Hillsborough County, FL Lee County, FL 8

1,800 TPD WTE Facility Three 400 TPD Martin combustion units plus one new 600 TPD unit online 2009 Originally designed as 1,200 TPD facility completed in 1987 Two Turbine Generators providing 46.5 MW of renewable electrical generating capability Service Agreement extended through 2029 County owned WTE Facility 9

Particulate (mg/dscm) Superior Environmental Performance Dioxin/Furan (ng/dscm) Mercury (µg/dscm) Lead (µg/dscm) Cadmium (µg/dscm) All concentrations corrected to 7% oxygen. Actual vs. Allowable Emissions Permit Limit 25 original 12 - expansion 30 original 13 - expansion 50 - original 28 - expansion 400 original 140 - expansion 35 original 10 - expansion 2010 2014 Actual Results 0.72 0.81 4.53 3.27 4.47 1.18 3.54 2.62 0.23 0.26 % below Limit 97% 93% 85% 75% 91% 96% 99% 98% 99% 97% 10

Sustainable Solid Waste Management Sustainable Hierarchy Hillsborough County 4 Community Collection Centers 3 Household Chemicals and Electronics Collection Centers 3 Yard Waste Processing Facilities 2 Transfer Stations 1-1,800 TPD WTE Facility 1-3,300 Acre Class I Landfill Facility Hillsborough County Managed 958,492 Total Tons in 2014 191,464 Tons of Material Recycled Inc. 12,693 tons of Fe & NFe Metals by the WTE Facility 594,647 Tons Processed by the WTE Facility 116,181 Tons Yard Waste Processed 224,798 Tons Landfilled Majority Ash and Unprocessible Waste 11

12

1,050 TPD WTE Facility Three 350 TPD Martin combustion units Facility completed in 1991 One Turbine Generators providing 25 MW of renewable electrical generating capability APC Retrofit 2000 Clean Air Act Requirement Service Agreement extended through 2024 County owned WTE Facility 13

Superior Environmental Performance Actual vs. Allowable Emissions Permit Limit 2010 2014 Actual Results % below Limit Particulate (mg/dscm) 25 1.63 93.5% Dioxin/Furan (ng/dscm) 30 1.79 94.0% Mercury (µg/dscm) 50 4.50 91.0% Lead (µg/dscm) 400 4.17 99.0% Cadmium (µg/dscm) 35 0.77 97.8% All concentrations corrected to 7% oxygen. 14

15

16

3,150 TPD WTE Facility Three 1,050 TPD Martin combustion units Originally designed as 2,100 TPD facility completed in 1983 1,050 TPD Expansion completed in 1986 Two Turbine Generators providing up to 75 MW of renewable electrical generating capability County owned WTE Facility 17

10 year Service Agreement Initial Term 1/1/15 thru 12/31/24 - with two potential 5 yr. extensions at County s option & our acceptance The Service Agreement Initial Term is split into 2 Periods Initial Operating Period (IOP) 1/1/15-12/31/16 Complete Technical Recovery Plan Schedule 19 Projects Performance Responsibility Limited to: Protecting and Improving the County s Electrical Capacity Factor Maintaining Ash Residue Quality for County use as Landfill Cover Normal Operating Period from end of IOP thru Initial Term Typical O&M Responsibilities commence All typical Performance Guarantees commence 18

Superior Environmental Performance Actual vs. Allowable Emissions Permit 2014 % below Limit Actual Results Limit Particulate (mg/dscmc) 25 6 75% Dioxin/Furan (ng/dscmc) 30 2 92% Mercury (µg/dscmc) 50 4 92% Lead (mg/dscmc) 0.4 0.005 99% Cadmium (mg/dscmc) 0.035 0.0009 98% All concentrations corrected to 7% oxygen. 19

Sustainable Solid Waste Management Sustainable Hierarchy Pinellas County 61 Community Collection Centers 3 Household Chemicals and Electronics Collection Centers 4 Yard Waste Processing Facilities 1 3,150 TPD WTE Facility 1 497 Acre Class I Landfill Facility Pinellas County Managed 1,442,551 Total Tons in 2014 257,288 Tons of Material Recycled Including 26,470 tons of Fe and NFe Metal by the WTE Facility 878,972 Tons Processed by the WTE Facility 165,244 Tons Yard Waste Processed 141,047 Tons Landfilled Diverted and Unprocessible Waste 226,763 Tons of Ash Residue from the WTE Facility 20

Pinellas County s existing Solid Waste Management Complex has approximately 90 years of useful landfill life remaining The Fact is this is all the landfill space the County will ever have Focus is on: Maximizing Resource Utilization Air Space Conservation Landfill Reclamation 21

Waste-to-Energy Landfills Converts MSW to energy in 1-hour vs. 100 years to decompose with potential leaks Modern emission control & monitoring vs. No emission control; limited monitoring Generate 550 750 kwh/ton vs. With landfill gas recovery 65kWh/ton Avoids 100% of methane vs. Leading source of methane emissions Recover and recycle metals vs. No metal recovery 22

Partner with municipalities to sustainably dispose of waste Technologically advanced facilities combust waste at high temperatures Resulting steam used to produce electricity for sale or sold directly Metals are retrieved from the process and recycled GHG s are reduced and fossil fuels are offset 23