The incinerator industry admits that incineration is more expensive than landfilling. This is true in nearly every local instance we’ve seen, with rare exceptions. Here are some of the admissions by the industry:
Most recently, the industry has admitted that incineration “is considerably more costly than the alternative of landfill disposal” and that a “principal reason for the cost disparity noted above is the considerable expense” of air pollution controls.
Source: Aug 30, 2019 Amicus curiae filing by the “Local Government Coalition for Renewable Energy,” an unincorporated and informal group of 11 local governments that host 13 trash incinerators, 10 of which are privately operated (all by Covanta, the nation’s largest incinerator corporation) in the lawsuit over the Baltimore Clean Air Act, in their effort to interfere with Baltimore City’s right to adopt a local clean air law that could force the closure of two waste incinerators in their city.
Our comparison of the local contract prices in 2019 for incineration vs. landfilling in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania finds that the average incinerator contract in 2019 is $64.43/ton while the average landfill contract is $47.86/ton. See our Montgomery County, PA page.
Two national waste industry trade associations also admit this:
“Waste-to-energy is an additional capital cost. That is not in dispute, compared to a landfill… compared to a landfill, which is a less capital-intense structure – it is more expensive. If you had a landfill next to a waste-to-energy facility, then almost in every case, you would think the landfill is going to be cheaper.”
-Ted Michaels, President, Energy Recovery Council (the trash incinerator industry’s trade association), March 18, 2013 testimony before Washington, DC City Council (see video at 1:44)
Source: National Solid Waste Management Association 2005 Tip Fee Survey, p.4.