Source Feed: City of Ottawa News Releases
Author: City of Ottawa - Media Relations / Ville d'Ottawa - Relations avec les médias
Publication Date: June 25, 2025 - 15:34
Council approves exploration of long-term waste management solutions
June 25, 2025
Council today approved exploring how to manage waste in the future. The City will take an in-depth look at three possible, proven options to ensure Ottawa is ready when the Trail Waste Facility Landfill reaches capacity.
The City studied five different waste management options. After reviewing the environmental, technical, financial and social impacts of each, three options will be considered in more detail:
- Keep using the Trail Waste Facility landfill and switch to private facilities when full: This option is the simplest and least costly in the short term, but it comes with long-term risks. The City would rely on private companies, which could mean unpredictable costs and limited space. No significant capital investment would be needed in the near term, but tipping fees could be controlled by the owners of the private facilities with the potential to be higher in the future.
- Build a waste-to-energy incineration facility: This facility would burn waste to create energy and reduce landfill use by up to 77 per cent. While it would provide revenue from energy capture and could have a low environmental footprint, it would be expensive to build and operate. The estimated capital costs range from $497 million to $862 million, with annual operating costs of $47 million. Opportunities to offset the costs through partnerships would be explored through the next steps of this project.
- Build a new landfill: Even with new technologies, the City would still need to manage some residual waste. A new landfill would be costly to build. Finding a site and securing approvals for it could be challenging. At the same time, a new landfill could produce less greenhouse gases than incineration. The estimated capital costs range from $439 million to $761 million, with annual operating costs of $15.6 million.
- Establish that privately initiated applications to expand urban or rural village area boundaries may only be considered where the City does not have enough land for 15 years of residential growth
- Clarify that Ottawa’s OP already includes the “strategic growth areas” required by PPS 2024, listing them as lands with a Hub and Corridor designation where new mid-rise and high-rise growth will be focused
- Identify and establish density targets for areas within a radius of 500 to 800 metres of existing or planned transit stations that operate in partially or completely dedicated rights-of-way
- Adjust the list of permitted uses on lands that PPS 2024 calls “Employment areas,” and establish the criteria if such lands are proposed to be redesignated
- Define Ottawa’s agricultural land base and outline when studies may be required, given PPS 2024 mandates municipalities must consider the impacts of land-use planning decisions on the entire agricultural system
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