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Clean energy or open space? Baylands debate forces city to weigh competing goals

Disagreement over future of Measure E site continues to divide local environmentalists

The Measure E site is located next to the Regional Water Quality Control Plant. Some of the measure's supporters believe the site could still be used to convert local sewage sludge into energy. Embarcadero Media file photo by Veronica Weber.

The future of Palo Alto's most disputed piece of open space will once again be up in the air next week, when the City Council considers two competing visions for sustainability.

The 10-acre parcel is located in the Baylands, adjacent to both the wastewater plant and Byxbee Park. And for over a decade, it has been at the center of a tug-of-war between climate activists who see it as perfectly suited for a waste-to-energy facility and conservationists who see it as a valuable but neglected bit of open space. On Monday night, April 3, the City Council will consider both sides as it seeks to answer a question that continues to divide local environmentalists: Should the site be officially rededicated as parkland?

For many local conservationists, the answer is clearly yes. During a public hearing in front of the Parks and Recreation Commission last October, representatives from groups such as the Sierra Club and the Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society urged the commission to support rededicating the land. The 10 acres were considered parkland until 2011, when voters approved Measure E and made the site available for a waste-to-energy facility.

Michael Ferreira, who serves on the executive committee of the Sierra Club Loma Prieta Chapter, called the "undedication" of the 10-acre site a "mistake taken in good faith." Ferreira noted that the city hasn't built the plant that was envisioned in the lead-up to Measure E, and he dismissed any other ideas about installing a waste facility as "more futurism."

"There's something about taking away parkland — un-dedicating parkland — that just goes against the grain," Ferreira said at the hearing.

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Susan DesJardins, chair of the Sierra Club's San Francisco Bay Alive Campaign, called the Bay a critical habitat for fish, birds and other wildlife and argued that urban and industrial growth has placed pressure on the area's environmental health. She called the site a "critical corridor between" Harbor Marsh and the Emily Renzel wetlands.

"This site needs tender love and care, not industrialization," DesJardins said.

The Measure E site is located next to Byxbee Park and the Regional Water Quality Control Plant in the Baylands. Courtesy city of Palo Alto.

Others see things starkly differently. Palo Alto resident Debbie Mytels recalled in an interview the excitement she witnessed in the community when she was gathering signatures in front of Piazza's grocery store for Measure E more than a decade ago. Supporters of the measure, which won 65% of the vote, enthusiastically endorsed the idea of building a facility that would both produce energy and take care of local solid waste, which currently gets shipped to an anaerobic digester in San Jose.

"I don't think we should immediately just say, 'Let's throw in the towel!' In part, because it seems to me the site isn't really suitable for parkland. It's right next to the sewage treatment plant: not where you want to have a picnic," Mytels said.

One technology that Mytels and others want to see the city explore is pyrolysis, which uses high heat to convert organic waste into syngas and biochar. The former could be used for power; the latter has various uses, most notably as a soil additive in agriculture. She and other supporters of Measure E point as an example in Redwood City, where the company Bioforcetech is currently operating a pyrolysis facility for Silicon Valley Clean Water, an agency that serves Belmont, Redwood City, San Carlos and the West Bay Sanitary District.

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Bruce Hodge, member of the group Carbon Free Palo Alto, is also hoping that the city will continue to evaluate ways to use the Measure E site for waste management. A pyrolysis plant, he said, fits well with the vision of Measure E, which expressly limits development to facilities that would be used for "converting yard trimmings, food waste, other municipal organics and/or sewage sludge from the regional wastewater treatment plant by biological and/or other environmentally equally protective technology."

The syngas that is produced through the plant is used to power the pyrolysis process, Hodge noted, and the biochar gets cleansed of harmful synthetic chemicals known as "per and polyfluoroalkyl substances" (PFAs). The plant, he said, "is essentially net zero."

"Based on the research I've done, I think the pyrolysis option is most promising because it both delivers carbon-negative emissions through sequestration of the carbon and it takes care of the PFAs problem," he said.

But supporters of exploring a new plant suffered a setback in October, when the parks commission voted 4-2 to recommend the rededication of the site as parkland, which would effectively kill any proposed development. Chair Jeff Greenfield, speaking for the majority, noted that 10 years have already passed since Measure E passed and that there are currently no plans on the horizon to build any waste facility.

The measure authorized the council to restore the site as parkland after 10 years if a facility had not been built, and Greenfield was among those who suggested it's time to do just that.

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Greenfield also pointed to the "uncomfortable position" of seeing traditional allies in opposition.

"We know this issue has sharply divided our community, without question," Greenfield said. "And it's a division among community members who are more typically on the same side when there are matters of environmental decisions and sustainability going forth."

Commissioner Shani Kleinhaus, an environmental advocate at Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society, also argued that the current designation keeps the land in limbo, a policy that she called "unjustifiable."

"We have 10 acres there that people would really like to see restored, sitting as a hostage in a way," Kleinhaus said at the meeting.

On Monday it will be the council's turn to weigh in. In a new report, staff from the Community Services Department do not take a position on the potential rededication of the Measure E site. The report notes, however, that the site could play a role in city discussions of other climate-change initiatives.

"This includes evaluating the development of an advanced water purification facility at the former Los Altos Treatment Plant, other wastewater treatment needs, and sea-level rise planning," the report states. "These interests could lead to other potential uses for the Measure E site."

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Gennady Sheyner
 
Gennady Sheyner covers the City Hall beat in Palo Alto as well as regional politics, with a special focus on housing and transportation. Before joining the Palo Alto Weekly/PaloAltoOnline.com in 2008, he covered breaking news and local politics for the Waterbury Republican-American, a daily newspaper in Connecticut. Read more >>

Follow on Twitter @paloaltoweekly, Facebook and on Instagram @paloaltoonline for breaking news, local events, photos, videos and more.

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Clean energy or open space? Baylands debate forces city to weigh competing goals

Disagreement over future of Measure E site continues to divide local environmentalists

The future of Palo Alto's most disputed piece of open space will once again be up in the air next week, when the City Council considers two competing visions for sustainability.

The 10-acre parcel is located in the Baylands, adjacent to both the wastewater plant and Byxbee Park. And for over a decade, it has been at the center of a tug-of-war between climate activists who see it as perfectly suited for a waste-to-energy facility and conservationists who see it as a valuable but neglected bit of open space. On Monday night, April 3, the City Council will consider both sides as it seeks to answer a question that continues to divide local environmentalists: Should the site be officially rededicated as parkland?

For many local conservationists, the answer is clearly yes. During a public hearing in front of the Parks and Recreation Commission last October, representatives from groups such as the Sierra Club and the Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society urged the commission to support rededicating the land. The 10 acres were considered parkland until 2011, when voters approved Measure E and made the site available for a waste-to-energy facility.

Michael Ferreira, who serves on the executive committee of the Sierra Club Loma Prieta Chapter, called the "undedication" of the 10-acre site a "mistake taken in good faith." Ferreira noted that the city hasn't built the plant that was envisioned in the lead-up to Measure E, and he dismissed any other ideas about installing a waste facility as "more futurism."

"There's something about taking away parkland — un-dedicating parkland — that just goes against the grain," Ferreira said at the hearing.

Susan DesJardins, chair of the Sierra Club's San Francisco Bay Alive Campaign, called the Bay a critical habitat for fish, birds and other wildlife and argued that urban and industrial growth has placed pressure on the area's environmental health. She called the site a "critical corridor between" Harbor Marsh and the Emily Renzel wetlands.

"This site needs tender love and care, not industrialization," DesJardins said.

Others see things starkly differently. Palo Alto resident Debbie Mytels recalled in an interview the excitement she witnessed in the community when she was gathering signatures in front of Piazza's grocery store for Measure E more than a decade ago. Supporters of the measure, which won 65% of the vote, enthusiastically endorsed the idea of building a facility that would both produce energy and take care of local solid waste, which currently gets shipped to an anaerobic digester in San Jose.

"I don't think we should immediately just say, 'Let's throw in the towel!' In part, because it seems to me the site isn't really suitable for parkland. It's right next to the sewage treatment plant: not where you want to have a picnic," Mytels said.

One technology that Mytels and others want to see the city explore is pyrolysis, which uses high heat to convert organic waste into syngas and biochar. The former could be used for power; the latter has various uses, most notably as a soil additive in agriculture. She and other supporters of Measure E point as an example in Redwood City, where the company Bioforcetech is currently operating a pyrolysis facility for Silicon Valley Clean Water, an agency that serves Belmont, Redwood City, San Carlos and the West Bay Sanitary District.

Bruce Hodge, member of the group Carbon Free Palo Alto, is also hoping that the city will continue to evaluate ways to use the Measure E site for waste management. A pyrolysis plant, he said, fits well with the vision of Measure E, which expressly limits development to facilities that would be used for "converting yard trimmings, food waste, other municipal organics and/or sewage sludge from the regional wastewater treatment plant by biological and/or other environmentally equally protective technology."

The syngas that is produced through the plant is used to power the pyrolysis process, Hodge noted, and the biochar gets cleansed of harmful synthetic chemicals known as "per and polyfluoroalkyl substances" (PFAs). The plant, he said, "is essentially net zero."

"Based on the research I've done, I think the pyrolysis option is most promising because it both delivers carbon-negative emissions through sequestration of the carbon and it takes care of the PFAs problem," he said.

But supporters of exploring a new plant suffered a setback in October, when the parks commission voted 4-2 to recommend the rededication of the site as parkland, which would effectively kill any proposed development. Chair Jeff Greenfield, speaking for the majority, noted that 10 years have already passed since Measure E passed and that there are currently no plans on the horizon to build any waste facility.

The measure authorized the council to restore the site as parkland after 10 years if a facility had not been built, and Greenfield was among those who suggested it's time to do just that.

Greenfield also pointed to the "uncomfortable position" of seeing traditional allies in opposition.

"We know this issue has sharply divided our community, without question," Greenfield said. "And it's a division among community members who are more typically on the same side when there are matters of environmental decisions and sustainability going forth."

Commissioner Shani Kleinhaus, an environmental advocate at Santa Clara Valley Audubon Society, also argued that the current designation keeps the land in limbo, a policy that she called "unjustifiable."

"We have 10 acres there that people would really like to see restored, sitting as a hostage in a way," Kleinhaus said at the meeting.

On Monday it will be the council's turn to weigh in. In a new report, staff from the Community Services Department do not take a position on the potential rededication of the Measure E site. The report notes, however, that the site could play a role in city discussions of other climate-change initiatives.

"This includes evaluating the development of an advanced water purification facility at the former Los Altos Treatment Plant, other wastewater treatment needs, and sea-level rise planning," the report states. "These interests could lead to other potential uses for the Measure E site."

Comments

DebbieMytels
Registered user
Midtown
on Mar 30, 2023 at 11:37 am
DebbieMytels, Midtown
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 11:37 am

Thanks for this thoughtful article. We should expect the Council to be as thoughtfuI, since there is no need to hurry in making a decision. The City staff should be asked to do more research, since it's clear that there are now some options to be examined in light of current needs and newer technology, such as the pyrolysis plant in Redwood City.


Nancy Levy
Registered user
Downtown North
on Mar 30, 2023 at 12:12 pm
Nancy Levy, Downtown North
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 12:12 pm

Ten years is a short amount of time when we're talking about climate change. Let's explore the pyrolysis plant and keep this site available for at least 10 more years.


Calius
Registered user
Barron Park
on Mar 30, 2023 at 12:42 pm
Calius , Barron Park
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 12:42 pm

Byxbee Park and surrounding environs is one of the most crucial wildlife corridors along the San Francisco Bay because it links up all of the wildlife corridors from the Facebook Campus through to Moffett Field. If the area in question were to have that digestor built, the construction of it would wipe out all of the cover between Byxbee and the water treatment plant. In order for the trucks to come and go, the dirt road that leads from Embarcadero Way to this proposed 10 acre site will become the main "highway" for the trucks to move in and out and that will further wipe out the ecosystem. (This was a part of the original Measure E.) If this plant were to be built, it would destroy a large part of the baylands ecosystem, thus negatively impacting the biodiversity of the baylands. It is the loss of biodiversity that is causing the ongoing 6th Mass Extinction, i.e. Monarch Butterflies, numerous bird populations and it's effecting the decline of all mammals, both at the baylands and globally. You can double check everything I've written here as my comments are scientifically based. Sincerely, Bill Leikam, aka The Fox Guy


TuppenceT
Registered user
Adobe-Meadow
on Mar 30, 2023 at 5:31 pm
TuppenceT, Adobe-Meadow
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 5:31 pm

The Palo Alto Regional Water Quality Control PlantBiosolids Facility Plan Update (2019) shows that Pyrolysis requires drying of the biosolids (even after dewatering) using natural gas. How is that consistent with Palo Alto's efforts to phase out natural gas as an energy source?


greg schmid
Registered user
Palo Verde
on Mar 30, 2023 at 7:50 pm
greg schmid, Palo Verde
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 7:50 pm

This is a real dilemma for all serious environmentalists. It's always good to have good information. LA County puts out a good regular newsletter that tracks conversion experiments around the country--those that work and those that don't.
Check it out: SoCalConversion@pw.lacounty.gov


hilary
Registered user
St. Claire Gardens
on Mar 30, 2023 at 8:09 pm
hilary, St. Claire Gardens
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 8:09 pm

Agree that this is a tough issue for the environmental community, however, I support the use of this land for the higher environment cause of converting the communities organic waste to green energy. Especially, considering that Measure E land is only 10 out of over 200 acres on the industrial edge of the wastewater treatment plant - the least appealing part of what is an old landfill.


TuppenceT
Registered user
Adobe-Meadow
on Mar 30, 2023 at 11:31 pm
TuppenceT, Adobe-Meadow
Registered user
on Mar 30, 2023 at 11:31 pm

The 2019 study shows that drying/Pyrolysis had the highest GHG emissions of all alternative studied due to the need to dry the materials. It was also more expensive than the other alternatives. And more risky. Does not seem like a viable solution to me.


Bruce Hodge
Registered user
Palo Verde
on Mar 31, 2023 at 9:59 am
Bruce Hodge, Palo Verde
Registered user
on Mar 31, 2023 at 9:59 am

The 2019 study on pyrolysis is dated, contains huge flaws and is no longer relevant today. In fact the drying required by the pyrolysis is powered by the thermal energy obtained from the pyrolysis process and after a small initial energy input, the entire process is net energy neutral, and generates negative carbon emissions because the carbon content is sequestered in biochar. Pyrolysis is a win-win both on greenhouse gas emissions, the elimination of significant pollutants such as PFAS and micro-plastics. The current process that Palo Alto uses allows both farm workers and farm land to be exposed to these potent pollutants. PFAS in particular has just been regulated in drinking water by the EPA and is a significant concern due to the fact that they are bio-accumulators and work their way up the food chain just like DDT. This is the future of sewage treatment.


PA resident
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Mar 31, 2023 at 10:09 am
PA resident, Duveneck/St. Francis
Registered user
on Mar 31, 2023 at 10:09 am

The Measure E site covers about 1/2 of 1% of the 1,940 acres of the Baylands, which consist primarily of parkland and open space. It would be irresponsible to foreclose the ability to use this small footprint to treat our own organic waste in a more environmentally-friendly way. Palo Alto used to take care of its refuse and green waste at the landfill on 126 acres of the Baylands that encompass the Measure E site. Since the landfill closed, refuse (other than recyclables, which also go elsewhere) has been trucked to San Jose for burial – that’s not going to change. But we can do better with organic waste. Yard trimmings that used to be composted at the dump site are now also trucked to San Jose, along with food waste, which emits considerable greenhouse gases.
At least sewage is first processed at the Sludge Dewatering facility just north of the Measure E site. After dewatering, it is thickened and loaded into trucks that take it elsewhere for further treatment, and then converted for use in farming areas. But the sludge can contain harmful PFAS "forever chemicals" that are deposited in the fields, which pyrolysis processing could eliminate. Pyrolysis or other methods could also produce much less GHG than innumerable truck trips, which would help Palo Alto meet its goal to drastically cut GHG. Redwood City and Silicon Valley Clean Water began using pyrolysis several years ago, we can learn from their experience.
Why should the Parks & Rec Committee be solely empowered to recommend the fate of the site, when it has limited purview? Council has staff, the Utilities Advisory Commission, and consultants that can evaluate the advantages and costs of alternate ways to process one or more of the City’s organic waste streams. It should engage these resources before forfeiting this option, likely forever, since reversing a park dedication of the Measure E site would require voter approval.


tag
Registered user
Duveneck/St. Francis
on Mar 31, 2023 at 10:16 am
tag, Duveneck/St. Francis
Registered user
on Mar 31, 2023 at 10:16 am

Keeping options open while alternatives can be studied seems the only prudent choice----which means not ceding the 10 acres to parkland now. Climate change as a stimulus for action is only now getting broader traction. It will take time to provoke and then test proposed solutions. Finding another local suitable site for waste to energy conversion will be almost impossible if these 10 acres are taken off the table now.


Dave Warner
Registered user
Crescent Park
on Mar 31, 2023 at 12:29 pm
Dave Warner, Crescent Park
Registered user
on Mar 31, 2023 at 12:29 pm

Please don't overturn measure E and return the 10 acres to parkland. A 65% majority voting in favor of measure E is a big majority. It seems risky to overturn the will of the voters particularly when there is no urgency.

I am an avid environmentalist, nature lover and bird lover and am a member of the California Naturalist community. I've also been a Palo Alto resident for 35 years.

While the specific details for how the measure E site was going to be used have not occurred, the spirit of the measure was to improve our sustainability, which still has significance for the site. Sending our sewage sludge back into the food supply in ways that create methane and that don't address such things as PFAS, is not a great practice.

Voters decided in 2011 that setting aside a small amount of newly available parkland in order to help sustainability was the right choice. Let's not make a decision to release this small plot until our sustainability concerns are behind us.


BettyG
Registered user
Old Palo Alto
on Mar 31, 2023 at 1:31 pm
BettyG, Old Palo Alto
Registered user
on Mar 31, 2023 at 1:31 pm

The quote regarding who would want to have a picnic there encapsulates the entire problem with this argument. Who would? Our threatened birds and other wildlife who have lost most of their habitat. That is who. Not everything is about humans in this human-centered society.

We are in the midst of a mass extinction event which is only partially caused by climate change. We need to address both and taking away habitat that could easily be restored is not the answer. Let us explore other ways to fight climate change that do not remove essential wildlife corridors and vital habitat from those with whom we share this planet.


PA Resident
Registered user
Fairmeadow
on Apr 2, 2023 at 1:23 pm
PA Resident, Fairmeadow
Registered user
on Apr 2, 2023 at 1:23 pm

Palo Alto needs to take care of its own waste rather than shipping it off to San Jose and other places. Perfect example of NIMBYism. The Measure E won overwhelmingly and resident wishes should be maintained.


staying home
Registered user
Crescent Park
on Apr 4, 2023 at 11:30 am
staying home, Crescent Park
Registered user
on Apr 4, 2023 at 11:30 am

How like Palo Alto to generate waste and ship it to somewhere else for others to deal with. If we have an opportunity to "own" our waste and take care of it locally, we are obligated to do so. I see this as the price we have to pay.


David Bubenik
Registered user
University South
on Apr 5, 2023 at 4:17 pm
David Bubenik, University South
Registered user
on Apr 5, 2023 at 4:17 pm

A dozen years ago Palo Alto voters bought the promise of making clean energy from garbage on this site, via the purported miracle of Anaerobic Digestion. But for various good reasons nothing was built.

The atmosphere lucked out big time. The CO2 emissions of an anaerobic digester fueled electric generator are whoppingly huge: 140% of the CO2 emissions of that benchmark of dirty energy, the coal fired generator. Building a coal burning generator would have been much "greener." The analysis showing this is quite straightforward. It is online at www.DirtyDioxide.com.

The latest buzzword is Pyrolysis. What will the next bright butterfly be? I wryly wonder if our city could have afforded to follow these fads, remodeling an anaerobic-digester based electric generator plant into a waste pyrolyzer, and then into ... ?

Seriously, we must ask what the real greenhouse gas emissions of a pyrolysis operation might be, for various energy input options. Any takers? Be sure to show your work like I did.


Tom DuBois
Registered user
Midtown
on Apr 6, 2023 at 11:21 am
Tom DuBois, Midtown
Registered user
on Apr 6, 2023 at 11:21 am

As Greg Schmid said, its a real dilmena. While I respect what Peter Drekmeier and others are saying about the desire here, for me number one, I feel like there was a promise to the voters when this passed - we'd undedicate and look for a solution for 10 years. That time has passed.
Secondly, when this came to council a few years back, none of the technologies were viable - council and staff really tried. Third, operaionally and financially a regional solution was going to be more feasible that a small solution for one city of 70,000. For these reasons, I think we should be looking for a regional solution and revert this back to parkland. The biggest reason is because that's what voters said.


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