Get the latest delivered to your inbox
Privacy Policy

Now Reading

Interface Flooring Systems Uses Landfill Emissions to Power Plant

Interface Flooring Systems Uses Landfill Emissions to Power Plant

Published 08-20-03

Submitted by Interface, Inc.

LAGRANGE, GA - The City of LaGrange, Ga., the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Interface Flooring Systems today announced the formation of a partnership to convert naturally occurring methane gas from the local landfill into a green energy source to fuel two heaters and a boiler at Interface's Kyle plant. On hand to sign the agreement today were LaGrange Mayor Jeff Lukken and John Wells, president of Interface Flooring Systems.

"We believe this is a first for the American carpet industry," said John Wells. "By turning waste into fuel for our manufacturing process, we are eliminating harmful emissions and increasing the use of renewable energy. We are not only reducing our negative footprint, we are moving towards our goal of being a restorative company." Interface estimates it will reduce natural gas consumption at the plant by 20 percent, but the offset of greenhouse gas emissions is more substantial.

"The magnitude of this project is such that it offsets the greenhouse gas emissions for all of Interface's North American carpet manufacturing facilities, making them all climate neutral," said Wells, explaining that unburned methane is 21 times as potent as carbon dioxide in its contribution to global warming.

"EPA commends Interface and the city of LaGrange for their leadership in initiating this renewable energy project. By preventing emissions of methane, voluntary projects like Interface's help businesses and communities protect the environment and build a sustainable energy future," said Chris Voell, Southeast Manager, EPA Landfill Methane Outreach Program. Additionally, the World Resources Institute facilitated the project and confirmed its environmental value.

Landfill gas is generated when organic materials in the landfill decompose, and is approximately 50 percent methane and 50 percent carbon dioxide. When methane escapes into the atmosphere, not only does it contribute to global warming, it creates odors, contributes to local smog, and creates a safety hazard. The City of LaGrange Landfill will be modified with a system to collect the gas and deliver it through a pipeline to Interface's Kyle plant, located 10 miles away. There it will be burned and converted to heat, just like natural gas. The City of LaGrange is retrofitting the landfill for gas collection, and the pipeline is being added incrementally to an existing city project to upgrade natural gas pipelines. Interface is retrofitting two natural gas heaters and a boiler to run on the converted methane.

"What makes this project particularly unique is that Interface and other industrial community partners are working with the city to provide an economical energy alternative that is also environmentally sound," said Tom Hall, LaGrange city manager.

Interface Flooring Systems is the flagship company of Atlanta-based Interface, Inc., a leading global manufacturer of floorcoverings and other textiles. The landfill gas project in LaGrange, Ga., is part of a global effort to find renewable sources of energy to power the company's operations and to reduce harmful emissions. Interface leads the industry in the application of renewable energy through on-site solar energy generation and green energy contracts, including wind and bio-mass. The company is a charter partner in the U.S. EPA Climate Leaders Program, a voluntary partnership challenging businesses to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions, and is also a founding member of the Green Power Market Development Group (GPMDG), a partnership of leading multinational corporations, the World Resources Institute, and Business for Social Responsibility. Interface Flooring Systems is one of 20 founding partners in the Green Power Partnership, a U.S. EPA program aimed at boosting the market for renewable energy alternatives that reduce the environmental and health risks of conventional electricity generation.

For more information on Interface's environmental initiatives, visit www.interfacesustainability.com.

Interface, Inc. logo

Interface, Inc.

Interface, Inc.

Interface, Inc. is the world’s largest manufacturer of modular carpet, which it markets under the InterfaceFLOR, FLOR, and Bentley Prince Street brands. Bentley Prince Street also is a leader in the designer-quality broadloom carpet market. In the mid-1990s, Interface’s Chairman and CEO Ray C. Anderson shifted the company’s strategy, aiming to redesign its industrial practices to instead focus on sustainability without sacrificing its business goals. Interface is committed to doing business in ways that minimize the impact on the environment. Interface companies have adopted an aggressive vision - To be the first company that, by its deeds, shows the entire industrial world what sustainability is, in all its dimensions: People, process, product, place and profits — by 2020 — and in doing so, to become restorative through the power of influence. In respecting that vision, every creative, manufacturing and building decision Interface makes, moves it closer to the goal of eliminating any negative impact Interface companies have on the environment.

More from Interface, Inc.

Join today and get the latest delivered to your inbox