As part of its sustainability programs, the company recycles or repurposes 90 percent of the 25,000 tons of wood waste produced annually
Published 02-22-22
Submitted by Duke Energy
Originally published by Duke Energy
Russ Wilkenloh has spent more than a decade at Duke Energy finding ways to reduce the amount of wood waste that goes to the landfill.
It’s a challenge.
Blackwood Solutions President Jason Feagans developed recycling processes with Wilkenloh, Duke Energy’s director of material management services for supply chain. After Wilkenloh heard about how Feagans was recycling railroad ties, he asked Feagans if he’d be willing to find a way to reduce wood waste for Duke Energy, too.Most power poles are as tall as a semitrailer truck and weigh as much as four refrigerators, which can make recycling difficult.
“Innovations in treated wood recycling are born here. When you look at a pile of broken, rotten wood,” Feagans said, “it’s hard to see value, but I get excited when I see it because we’re always thinking hard about what’s in that pile of wood. How can we turn it into other products that are sustainable, good for the environment and can make a dollar?”
Treated wood that’s still in good shape can be donated to people and nonprofits to build barns, fences and parking lot borders, which is an efficient way to repurpose the wood with little transportation and processing. If the scraps are too small to be used, they’re turned into coarse chips that can be sold to landfills to build roads so trucks can drive across the landfill and unload their trash. Normally, landfills would purchase gravel or some other material to build roads, so being able to use material that would have been added to the landfill as trash reduces overall waste.In 2021, Duke Energy repurposed or recycled 90 percent of its old power poles, pallets, reels and other wood, which prevented more than 22,000 tons of wood waste from being thrown away. The company works with Blackwood Solutions to collect the discarded wood from more than 200 operations centers and power plants in six states for several different uses.
Since Wilkenloh started Duke Energy’s recycling program, they’ve improved the amount of recycled or repurposed waste from all its offices and power plants from 52 percent in 2008 to 80 percent in 2021. Duke Energy plans to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, and Wilkenloh said he sees the company’s recycling work as an extension of its overall goal to generate cleaner energy.Scrap untreated wood can also be recycled to produce biochar, a charcoal-like material that sequesters carbon. Burning untreated wood in an oxygen-poor environment at a high temperature reduces the wood’s mass by about 95 percent, so it takes up less space than the scraps and locks in much of the wood’s carbon rather than releasing it into the atmosphere. Farmers can also enhance their soil by adding biochar.
“If teammates would put it in the recycling pile instead of waste containers, we could move the needle. Our environmental footprint goes beyond just generating electricity,” Wilkenloh said. “It applies to everything we do for Duke Energy including our waste stream.”Wilkenloh is known for checking Duke Energy dumpsters for things that could have been recycled, and while he’s proud of the progress they’ve made, he said there’s always room for improvement.
Duke Energy (NYSE: DUK), a Fortune 150 company headquartered in Charlotte, N.C., is one of the largest energy holding companies in the U.S. It employs 30,000 people and has an electric generating capacity of 51,000 megawatts through its regulated utilities and 3,000 megawatts through its nonregulated Duke Energy Renewables unit.
Duke Energy is transforming its customers’ experience, modernizing the energy grid, generating cleaner energy and expanding natural gas infrastructure to create a smarter energy future for the people and communities it serves. The Electric Utilities and Infrastructure unit’s regulated utilities serve approximately 7.7 million retail electric customers in six states – North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. The Gas Utilities and Infrastructure unit distributes natural gas to more than 1.6 million customers in five states – North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Ohio and Kentucky. The Duke Energy Renewables unit operates wind and solar generation facilities across the U.S., as well as energy storage and microgrid projects.
Duke Energy was named to Fortune’s 2019 “World’s Most Admired Companies” list and Forbes’ 2019 “America’s Best Employers” list. More information about the company is available at duke-energy.com. The Duke Energy News Center contains news releases, fact sheets, photos, videos and other materials. Duke Energy’s illumination features stories about people, innovations, community topics and environmental issues.
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