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Port is emerging from multi-year, multi-party litigation, involving a tenant bankruptcy and efforts by the Port to collect on the prior tenant’s insurance
Port obtained “title” to pile in Spring of 2007
Judgment against tenant’s insurer just entered within last several weeks
Port to begin contracting effort to clear pile starting this summer/fall
Concrete and Asphalt Crushing
Concrete crushing provides synergies with existing Port tenants. Current batch plants must haul some material to Brisbane, due to close in near future. Critical to reaching City’s zero waste goal.
Emergency management component: after an earthquake where does debris go? Moved out of City by rail? Barge? May need to process (i.e., crush) before shipping.
Concrete and asphalt crushing yields raw materials that can go back into concrete (aggregate for non-structural applications) or asphalt (newer asphalt plants can handle up to 30% recycled content).
Without adequate market for products containing asphalt grindings (i.e., new asphalt plant), crushing enterprise may need to limit how much asphalt can be processed.
Concrete and Asphalt Crushing
• Two recent expressions of interest in rock crushing to Port Real Estate Division from private market
• 4-5 other companies expressed interest last year
• Likely would require 6 acres, interim leasing opportunity
• Lease-based environmental financial assurances to avoid repeating the past
Concrete and Asphalt Crushing
San Francisco’s Asphalt Plant
Pier 90-94 Backlands Opportunities
June 9, 2007
San Francisco’s Existing Municipal Asphalt Plant
OverviewCurrent Asphalt Plant Site
1 = City Municipal Plant (Jerrold Avenue/Quint Street)2 = Private Property3 = DTIS4 = SFWD CDD5 = Southeast Wastewater Treatment Plant6 = Central Shops7 = Peninsula Joint Power Authority8 = SE Community Center Greenhouse
OverviewAsphalt Plant History
• City has operated a plant since 1909.
• Current plant built in 1954, renovated 1992-93.
• Silos constructed in 2004, improved efficiency of plant, and increased capacity ($2.1 Million)
• Permitted capacity of 100,000 tons/year (Air District)
OverviewAsphalt Plant Production
Projected funding and tonnage based upon FY 2007-2016 Capital Plan
0
5,000,000
10,000,000
15,000,000
20,000,000
25,000,000
30,000,000
35,000,000
Str
eet
Res
urf
acin
g F
un
din
g
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
45,000
50,000
To
nn
age
Street Resurfacing Funding 11,000,000 11,800,000 21,100,000 30,200,000 20,583,000 26,458,000 30,506,000 29,417,000
Tons 17,335 25,261 31,863 40,712 30,875 39,158 44,234 41,478
FY 03-04 FY 04-05 FY 05-06FY 06-07 Projected
FY 07-08 Projected
FY 08-09 Projected
FY 09-10 Projected
FY 10-11 Projected
Plant Economics
There isn’t enough demand for asphalt in San Francisco to support more than one Asphalt Plant.
If a modern plant were built at Pier 90-94 Backlands, the City would close its plant at 1801 Jerrold.
CCSF Asphalt Plant
Cal Rock++
Graniterock
Graniterock
Dutra Materials
Berkeley Asphalt
Bay Area Asphalt Plants
Advantages of having a plant in San Francisco
• Because there is only one plant nearby (in South San Francisco), the City would be subject to monopolistic pricing of asphalt without a plant in the City.
• No recycling. More than 24,000 tons of asphalt grindings would be disposed of annually, many of them in landfills.
• An additional 18,000 miles of trucking would be required; apx. 3,500 additional gallons of diesel fuel annually for DPW alone.
Advantages of having a plant in San Francisco
• Without a plant, there is no guarantee of asphalt in an emergency. Large amounts of asphalt were supplied by the Plant immediately after the 1989 Earthquake for emergency repairs in SOMA and the Marina.
• Unreliable supply of asphalt. If the South City plant were to be closed, or supplying other jobs, DPW crews would be idled.
Advantages of having a plant at Pier 90-94 Backlands
Raw materials delivered by barge & rail•Gravel arrives from British Columbia by barge and is trucked through the neighborhood to the existing plant.•Other materials and petroleum additives could be delivered by rail, instead of by truck.New plant would be cleaner & more efficient w/easy access to recycled materials from adjacent rock crushing.