(781) 235-2605 or (508) 820-1662

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1-800-328-1116

Servicing the Metrowest region, Norfolk county, Middlesex county, and Worcester county.

Servicing the Metrowest region, Norfolk county, Middlesex county, and Worcester county.

Telephone: (781) 235-2605 or (508) 820-1662
Toll-Free: 1-800-328-1116
E-mail Address:  wellesleytruckingserviceinc@verizon.net

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Go GreenRecycling

We share your concerns for a clean and healthy environment in which to conduct business, and we offer prompt and courteous service at rates conducive to the reduction of your operating cost.  We will be more than happy to furnish you with a reference list upon request showing some of the many customers whom have been pleased with the utilization of our service over the years.

Making a difference:  WTS is helping to make our environment a cleaner, safer, and more inhabitable place for the future by NOT dumping and burying our trash in landfills.  Instead, our trash is brought to Waste Energy Facilities where all metal (cans, containers, etc.) and glass are separated and recycled.  The remaining trash is turned into electrical power by the processes known as Energy-from-Waste (EfW) or waste-to-energy (WTE).  This process takes all remaining trash and transfers it into combustion chambers where it is reduced to 10% of its original volume in the process. The heat generated from the combustion chambers heats up water in steel tubes that form the walls of the combustion chambers.  The water is turned to steam and sent through a turbine that continuously generates electricity.  The US Energy Council recognizes that “this technology is an alterative to recycling.”  A ton of trash brought to a Waste-Energy-Facility is equivalent to one barrel of oil which also helps to lower our country's dependency on oil from the Middle East. 

Landfills are a huge problem:  Currently, over 50% of the United States waste is disposed of in landfills annually.  At the present rate in the U. S. alone, 3,500 acres of land are lost annually to landfills, and this number will continue to rise to keep pace with our ever-increasing production of trash.  Landfills also release the potent greenhouse gas methane from decomposing trash and carbon emissions from the transportation methods used in the long-distance shipping of trash to open landfills.  Many communities are currently dealing with leakage from closed landfills, and high levels of methane emissions often make landfills dangerous and difficult places to redevelop.

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