Argo (Danish company)

Argo (formerly Kara/Noveren) is a Danish waste management company owned by nine municipalities in the western and southern part of metropolitan Copenhagen, Denmark. In 2014, Kara/Noveren inaugurated a new, energy-efficient waste-to-energy plant in Roskilde, Energitårnet ("The Energy Tower"), designed by Erick Van Egeraat.

History

The company was established as Kara/Noveren in 2007 through the merger of Kara and Noveren. In 2017, it was renamed Argo. The new name is short for "affald – ressourcer – genbrug - overskud".[1]

Company

Argo is owned by Greve, Holbæk, Kalundborg, Køge, Lejre, Odsherred, Roskilde, Solrød, and Stevns municipalities. The company has some 400,000 private and 22,500 commercial customers.

The Energy Tower

The Energy Tower waste-to-energy plant was inaugurated on 2 September 2014. The cost of its construction was DKK 1.3 billion. The facility produces electricity for approximately 65,000 households and district heating for 40,000 households, utilizing close to 100% of the energy in the waste as opposed to only 7+ % in the old oven line.[2] The electricity is sold to SEAS-NVE while the heat is sold to Roskilde Forsyning.

The building is the result of an architectural competition won by Erick Van Egeraat in 2010.[3] The building has a two-layered façade, the outer layer consists of amber-colored aluminum plates with laser-cut circular openings. A backlighting scheme creates a spark which for a few minutes every hour gradually illuminates the entire building.

gollark: It's wrong iff not approved by the PIERB.
gollark: ↓ you, consequently
gollark: Bernie Sanders, probably.
gollark: I think the entire universe becomes plasma or something.
gollark: See, if protons and electrons somehow magically became uncharged, then ??? bad things occur.

References

  1. "Her er Kara/Noverens nye navn". sn.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  2. "Emergitårnet til 1,3 milliarder kroner indviet I Roskildenoget" (in Danish). Byens Ejendomme. Retrieved 5 January 2015.
  3. "Glowing icon in Denmark". World Architecture News. Retrieved 5 January 2015.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.