Pines watches and waits as Miami-Dade considers scrapping new incinerator plans
Miami-Dade County may be backing away from plans to build a $2 billion waste-to-energy incinerator, a potential relief for Pembroke Pines residents worried about being downwind of the facility.
Mayor Daniella Levine Cava signaled the retreat in a recent memo after Miami-Dade commissioners rejected a garbage rate increase needed to fund the project.
FULL STORY: Good news for Pembroke Pines: Miami-Dade might not get a new incinerator after all
Here are key takeaways:
- Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said the county “cannot responsibly continue spending ratepayer dollars and staff resources” on a Waste to Energy facility after commissioners rejected the rate increases needed to fund it.
- The county has already spent $13 million on consultants for the project, according to the Miami Herald. The replacement plant would cost roughly $2 billion.
- Miami-Dade commissioners this month voted down a proposed 2% increase in residential garbage rates for 2027, which would have raised annual costs for a typical household to about $716.
- City officials and residents in nearby Miramar previously helped convince Miami-Dade not to build the incinerator at the old Opa-Locka airport site. Environmental advocates have raised alarms over air pollution, odors, truck traffic and health concerns.
- The memo does not formally kill the proposal. Commissioners could still revive talks on rate increases or pursue alternative financing. Miami-Dade has relied on shipping trash by truck and rail to landfills across Florida since the Doral incinerator burned down in 2023.
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