This consultation was open from:
January 24, 2024
to March 9, 2024
Decision summary
We have approved an amendment to the Environmental Compliance Approval No. 5250-6V4HX2 for Convertus Canada Ltd. for the operation of a waste disposal site (processing) located within a 4.17 hectare total site area located in the City of London, County of Middlesex, Ontario to amend the shipping and receiving hours.
Location details
Site address
4675 Wellington Road South
London,
ON
Canada
Site location map
The location pin reflects the approximate area where environmental activity is taking place.
View this location on a map opens link in a new windowProponent(s)
Convertus Canada Ltd.
307 Commissioners Road West
Unit 8
London,
ON
N6J 1Y4
Canada
Decision details
This amended Environmental Compliance Approval (waste disposal site) has been issued to Convertus Canada Ltd. for the existing waste disposal site (processing) facility located at 4675 Wellington Road South, London City, County of Middlesex.
This existing facility is a 4.17-hectare Waste Disposal Site (processing) serving the Province of Ontario, for receipt, temporary storage, transfer and pre-processing and aerobic biodegradation, including composting, of solid non-hazardous, domestic, institutional, commercial or industrial organic waste, encompassing the following:
- one enclosed processing building with the following:
- a receiving hall, a traffic/loading hall and material receiving and preparation areas, where the incoming organic waste is unloaded and pre-processed in an electric-powered shredder to open plastic bags and shred the waste, is mixed with mid-fraction organics from the screening process, the leaf and yard waste or, if available, the shredded root wood material and wood chips removed from the biofilters at the site;
- 12 aerated concrete tunnels, where the prepared organic waste mix undergoes active composting;
- screening area to screen the output from the concrete tunnels and where inorganic contaminants in the undersized fraction are removed in a magnetic separator and a ballistic separator;
- curing building to stockpile the decontaminated undersized fraction as a processed organic waste destined for an end-use as a NASM, or to stockpile and cure the undersized fraction into compost;
- ventilation system to maintain a negative pressure in the processing building at all times, by drawing air from the receiving and traffic halls, screening area and mechanical rooms, and the curing building. This air will either be used as process air in the concrete tunnels before collection in an exhaust duct leading to the odour abatement equipment, or be led directly to the odour abatement equipment that consists of the following:
- one roof-mounted mix-box, receiving ventilation air either directly from the building via bypass valves between inlet and outlet duct of the concrete tunnels to divert the air from the building directly to the odour abatement equipment or from the concrete tunnels, to split the flow into two equal streams before flowing into integrated ammonia scrubbers;
- two roof-mounted integrated ammonia scrubber housings, each consisting of two sections in series:
- one packed pre-scrubber, for the removal of dust and aerosols, filled with a polypropylene medium, with water spray nozzles on the front, for humidification and pre-treatment of odour in the air, including one combined water tank serving the two sections of both scrubber housings;
- one packed ammonia scrubber with vertical mounted spray nozzles, using sulphuric acid as a scrubbing medium, for the removal of ammonia from the air. The air from the scrubber housings is fed into two parallel-mounted tube air-water heat exchangers. The water from the clean water loop from the heat exchanger is then cooled in a crossflow two-cell cooling tower on the roof of the building and the two air streams that exit the integrated scrubber housings and heat exchangers discharge into one ductwork leading to the biofilters;
- four enclosed up-flow biofilters, all constructed in concrete tunnels and operating in parallel, filled with filtering medium consisting of shredded root wood materials and wood chips, equipped with a water sprinkler system at the top;
- three stack fans drawing air from the biofilters and discharging into a ground-based stack; and
- one booster fan, mounted on the roof of the processing building, drawing ambient air into the suction sides of the three stack fans before final emission through an exhaust stack extending 60 metres above grade;
- one outdoor leaf and yard waste storage area, measuring 40 metres in length and 15 metres in width located west of the enclosed processing building, where incoming leaf and yard waste is unloaded and screened immediately to remove odorous materials such as grass clippings from the leaf and yard waste for transfer to the enclosed building for processing. The remaining leaf and yard waste is moved into the enclosed processing building on an as-needed basis, to be shredded and mixed with the incoming organic waste;
- one outdoor storage area, located south-east of the enclosed processing building, for temporary storage of unused shredded root wood biofilter media; and
- one single weigh scale bridge to monitor and track the incoming and the outgoing materials
This amendment approves the shipping and receiving hours to accommodate truck delivery schedules since Convertus needs to extend the facility’s hours to receive an increased volume of truck traffic as a result of being awarded the City of London’s Green Bin composting contract.
This approval amends the shipping and receiving hours to Monday to Friday from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Saturday 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. The facility operates 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.
The waste disposal site serves the Province of Ontario. The organic waste quantities received, processed, and stored remain unchanged as those previously approved. The doors will be kept closed except to allow for traffic, and the facility will remain under negative pressure. No other operational changes will occur.
Effects of consultation
The ministry received 1 email from the neighbour notification required for waste disposal site proposals. The public comment raised concern about an increase of the operations. However, this proposal is not considered an increase to the operations since the receiving rates and the processing rates remained unchanged from the previous approval. The air and noise reviews considered potential impacts from longer receipt and shipping hours.
Supporting materials
View materials in person
Some supporting materials may not be available online. If this is the case, you can request to view the materials in person.
Get in touch with the office listed below to find out if materials are available.
733 Exeter Road
London,
ON
N6E 1L3
Canada
135 St Clair Ave West
1st Floor
Toronto,
ON
M4V 1P5
Canada
How to Appeal
This instrument decision can be appealed. You have 15 days from January 21, 2025 to begin the appeal process.
Carefully review the information below to learn more about the appeal process.
How to appealClick to Expand Accordion
Start the process to appeal
If you’re an Ontario resident, you can start the process to appeal this instrument decision.
First, you’ll need to seek leave (i.e. get permission) from the relevant appellate body to appeal the decision.
If the appellate body grants leave, the appeal itself will follow.
Seek leave to appeal
To seek leave to appeal, you need to do these three things:
- prepare your application
- provide notice to the minister
- mail your application to three parties
1. Prepare your application
You’ll need to prepare an application. You may wish to include the following things in your application:
- A document that includes:
- your name, phone number, fax number (if any), and/or email address
- the ERO number and ministry reference number (located on this page)
- a statement about whether you are a resident in Ontario
- your interest in the decision, and any facts you want taken into account in deciding whether you have an interest in the decision
- the parts of the instrument that you’re challenging
- whether the decision could result in significant harm to the environment
- the reason(s) why you believe that no reasonable person – having regard to the relevant law and to any government policies developed to guide decisions of that kind – could have made the decision
- the grounds (facts) you’ll be using to appeal
- the outcome you’d like to see
- A copy of the instrument (approval, permit, order) that you you are seeking leave to appeal. You’ll find this in the decision notice on the Environmental Registry
- Copies of all supporting documents, facts and evidence that you’ll be using to appeal
What is considered
The appeal body will consider the following two questions in deciding whether to grant you leave to appeal:
- is there is good reason to believe that no reasonable person, with respect to the relevant law and to any government policies developed to guide decisions of that kind, could have made the decision?
- could the decision you wish to appeal result in significant harm to the environment?
2. Provide your notice
You’ll need to provide notice to the Minister of the Environment, Conservation and Parks that you’re seeking leave to appeal.
In your notice, please include a brief description of the:
- decision that you wish to appeal
- grounds for granting leave to appeal
You can provide notice by email at minister.mecp@ontario.ca or by mail at:
College Park 5th Floor, 777 Bay St.
Toronto, ON
M7A 2J3
3. Mail your application
You’ll need to mail your application that you prepared in step #1 to each of these three parties:
- appellate body
- issuing authority (the ministry official who issued the instrument)
- proponent (the company or individual to whom the instrument was issued)
Convertus Canada Ltd.
307 Commissioners Road West
Unit 8
London,
ON
N6J 1Y4
Canada
Registrar, Ontario Land Tribunal
655 Bay Street, Suite 1500
Toronto, Ontario
M5G 1E5
(416) 212-6349
(866) 448-2248
OLT.Registrar@ontario.ca
Include the following:
This is not legal advice. Please refer to the Environmental Bill of Rights for exact legal requirements. Consult a lawyer if you need help with the appeal process.
Connect with us
Contact
Client Services and Permissions Branch
135 St Clair Ave West
1st Floor
Toronto,
ON
M4V 1P5
Canada
Original proposal
Proposal details
This proposal is to amend the Environmental Compliance Approval (waste disposal site) No. 5250-6V4HX2 for Convertus Canada Ltd. for the operation of a composting facility processing organics, located within a 4.17 hectare total site area in the City of London, County of Middlesex, Ontario.
This application is to amend the shipping and receiving hours to accommodate truck delivery schedules. Convertus is looking to expand the facility’s hours to receive an increased volume of truck traffic as a result of being awarded the City of London’s Green Bin composting contract.
This proposal is to amend the shipping and receiving hours to Monday to Friday from 5am to 9pm, and Saturday 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. Organic waste quantities received, processed, and stored will remain within the existing permitted quantities for the facility. The doors will be kept closed except to allow for traffic, and the facility will remain under negative pressure. No other operational changes will occur.
The waste disposal site serves the Province of Ontario and operates 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.
Supporting materials
View materials in person
Some supporting materials may not be available online. If this is the case, you can request to view the materials in person.
Get in touch with the office listed below to find out if materials are available.
135 St Clair Ave West
1st Floor
Toronto,
ON
M4V 1P5
Canada
Comment
Commenting is now closed.
This consultation was open from January 24, 2024
to March 9, 2024
Connect with us
Contact
Client Services and Permissions Branch
135 St Clair Ave West
1st Floor
Toronto,
ON
M4V 1P5
Canada
Comments received
Through the registry
0By email
1By mail
0