• The Maryvale EfW facility will provide councils and businesses with a competitive waste management solution.
    The Maryvale EfW facility will provide councils and businesses with a competitive waste management solution.
Close×

The $600 million Maryvale Energy from Waste (EfW) project has reached a major milestone, signing a multi-million-dollar engineering design agreement with Spanish infrastructure group Cobra Instalaciones y Servicios.

Global energy solutions company Babcock & Wilcox will partner with Cobra to provide the world-class technology for the build.

Cobra will now deliver full design and construction costings for the project, including the potential to upsize the facility’s capacity to process 375,000 tonnes of non-recyclable waste per annum.

A detailed geo-technical investigation will commence at the site in early 2024.

This work will also prepare for the construction of the Bottom Ash recycling and Accelerated Carbonation Technology facilities, to be co-located on the EfW site.

Chris Nagaura, CEO of Opal, who is part of the project consortium along with Veolia and Masdar Tribe Australia, said the agreement with Cobra and Babcock & Wilcox is a major step forward for the EfW project.

“Cobra and Babcock & Wilcox bring their world-class construction and technology expertise to the Maryvale Energy from Waste project,” he said.

“They will play an important role in confirming the overall cost for the project, meaning the consortium can secure financing and commence construction in 2024.”

Technology partner Babcock & Wilcox has previously worked closely with the Maryvale Mill, having supplied the site with boiler equipment used for energy generation. They will be responsible for delivering the moving grate furnace, boiler and flue gas treatment systems.

In the past 80 years, there have been more than 500 installations of Babcock & Wilcox technology in over 30 countries. This includes the CopenHill EfW plant in Copenhagen, which features a roof-top ski slope and hiking trail for the local community to use.

As Victoria’s most progressed EfW project, the Maryvale facility will target a 99 per cent diversion of residual waste away from landfill, generating approximately 500 jobs in the construction phase and bringing a new energy sector to the Latrobe Valley.

The project is the recipient of a $48.2 million grant from the Australian government under the Modern Manufacturing Initiative.

Recently, Maroondah City Council was confirmed as the first council to supply municipal solid waste to the Maryvale EfW facility.

The CopenHill EfW plant in Copenhagen, which features a roof-top ski slope and hiking trail for the local community to use.
The CopenHill EfW plant in Copenhagen, which features a roof-top ski slope and hiking trail for the local community to use.

Food & Drink Business

Australia’s food ministers have voted to begin the process of making the Health Star Rating (HSR) system mandatory on eligible packaged foods, after new monitoring showed the voluntary scheme fell well short of its agreed uptake target and has struggled to build consistent consumer confidence.

South-east Melbourne’s largest speculative cold storage facility has been launched to the leasing market, with Hale Capital Partners’ 27,291sqm “Adapt” project at Oakleigh South targeting completion in December 2026.

Asahi Beverages and Toll Group have launched what they describe as Australia’s largest single-location electric “route-to-market” heavy vehicle fleet, rolling out five battery-electric rigid trucks to service metropolitan beverage deliveries across Perth.