17 May 2011

Landfill Gas and Renewables Company Infinis Awards Star Net Geomatics with National Framework Agreement for Geospatial Services

Infinis awards Star Net Geomatics with National Framework Agreement for Geospatial Services.

Infinis, a UK leading renewable energy generator, has awarded Star Net Geomatics with a national framework agreement for the provision of Geospatial Survey services to its entire landfill gas (LFG) UK sites portfolio. This contract includes topographic, setting out and laser surveys for all its LFG portfolio and also supplying services for its onshore wind and hydro portfolio (a total of 140 operating onshore wind, hydro and LFG plants). As part of this agreement, Star Net Geomatics will also provide a bespoke Star Net (www.starnetisite.com), an online asset management facility which will host all data collected during the survey allowing Infinis’ Engineers and site operatives to access and manage site information at any time and from anywhere in the country.

Duane Longthorn, Procurement Manager, says: “Our thorough and extensive tender process demonstrated that Star Net not only met our expectations but exceeded them with a pro-active and innovating offer including management and control of a database to ensure our information is accessible, central and live. I look forward to developing our relationship into a true partnership that delivers a quality, reliable and cost effective process which provides added value for both parties.”

Douglas Brown, CEO of Star Net Geomatics, states: “I am delighted that our long-term relationship with Infinis, combined with our extensive Geospatial expertise and innovative development within this field, has led to this significant award. This project will provide valuable support at a time when Infinis needs an innovative asset management tool to integrate all of its current sites into a comprehensive data system. I am sure the outcome of this project will prove a successful partnership between the two companies and I look forward to working with the Infinis Team.”

In the year to 31 March 2010 the Infinis (www.infinis.com) group of companies produced approximately 10% of the UK’s renewable power. It operates a growing portfolio of 140 onshore wind, hydro and LFG plants across the UK, with a total generating capacity of 534MW, and employs approximately 390 people.
Star Net Geomatics Ltd (www.starnetgeomatics.com) is a UK-based company that provides a wide range of surveying, inspection and design services worldwide. Star Net’s Geomatics department has been working for over 10 years on Renewables projects and has Framework Agreement currently in place with major consultant and developers in the UK such as Scottish and Southern Energy to provide Geospatial Survey services.

Read more here.

10 May 2011

Area company entering the Third Frontier - Zanesville Times Recorder

NEWTON TOWNSHIP -- Alternative energy is starting to get more attention.


And with the influx of Third Frontier and federal stimulus funds, it's starting to help reshape Ohio's economy.




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Quasar Energy, for example, received millions of dollars in assistance to build a test bed for its biogas process at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center in Wooster, which in turn aided development of the BioHio Research Center there.


That led to the construction of biogas plants along U.S. 22 near East Fultonham, then in Columbus.


Quasar uses anaerobic digesters to cook down biosolids, such as fruits and vegetables delivered by companies such as Wal-Mart. Bacteria break down the waste products and the methane gas produced is used to generate electricity.


"We aren't building biogas plants. We're building an industry," Quasar Energy President Mel Kurtz said. "Over the past five years, we have worked to transfer European anaerobic digestion technology by sourcing and engineering specialized components from local suppliers. Today, most of the components used in our systems are sourced within Ohio."


"As we continue to grow this industry across the United States, the demand will increase for these Ohio components."


That means jobs for people like Chase Smith and Chase Warne, former classmates at Maysville High School.


The two operate Quasar's Zanesville Energy plant, and their youth -- both are 20-year-olds -- goes hand-in-hand with an alternative energy sector in its infancy.


"This is the future right here," Smith said, while watching a load of feedstock being delivered to the plant. "I can't think of anything else I'd like to be doing than being in this business. This is where it's at. A lot of younger kids like me are looking into careers. We're looking forward to what it could be."


Smith pointed out only 15 percent of the electricity generated at the local plant is used to run the plant; the remainder is diverted to American Electric Power's grid.


"When we're running at about 500 kilowatt hours, I guess we can supply enough electricity to light 300 homes here in Muskingum County," he said.


In addition, construction of facilities such as the Zanesville Anaerobic Digester System directly impact more than 50 Ohio companies, said Quasar Spokesperson Caroline Henry. That includes component manufacturers, fabricators, suppliers and contractors.


"These projects create real jobs, not only at the site as plant operators, but also within Quasar and the Ohio companies we have partnered with to build this industry," she said.


It's also opening the door for potential new industries, Kurtz said.


"The real opportunity is the generation of motor vehicle fuel," he said. "Quasar has plans to install CNG (compressed natural gas) fueling stations at all of our systems, including a public access station in Zanesville."


Smith looks forward to that and more expansion at the Zanesville site.


"I think we'll have another digester here eventually," he said. "We've got about 100 acres out here we could develop. If we start getting more product delivered and demand goes, and the public becomes more aware of what a place like this can do, I think we'll keep expanding."


View the original article here

09 May 2011

Biomass tour showcases three different biomass systems - Biomass Power and Thermal

Weaving through the six enormous anaerobic digester tanks at Anheuser-Busch’s complex in St. Louis, Ed Randazzo proudly pointed out the lack of foul smells. Randazzo is an operator at the Anheuser-Busch Bio-Energy Recovery System (BERS), just down the street from the company’s brewery and bottle factory, and the first of three different tour locations coinciding with Biomass Power & Thermal’s International Biomass Conference & Expo being held from May 2-5.



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The digester consumes effluent from the beer-making process, among other wastes. Tour participants got to view the biomass used in the anaerobic digestion process through a microscope, almost making it possible to catch a glimpse of the tiny microbes that live on the granular biomass and carry out the process. The system takes in about 3 million gallons of wastewater per day and reduces the facilities’ organic waste by about 80 percent. Material screened out of the wastewater is sold to a family horse radish farm in southern Illinois. The digesters produce about 900,000 square feet of biogas per day, used to generate process heat for the company’s plant.

Randazzo explained that the microbes reproduce and grow quickly, making it necessary to get rid of some of the digester biomass after its depth in the tanks reaches around 30 feet. Twenty-five is ideal, he added.

Randazzo also took tour guests past the evaporation coolers, designed to keep temperatures in the process below 103 degrees Fahrenheit. The microbes can survive lower temperatures and the coldest conditions they’ve worked under is about 85 degrees F.

At the end of the Anheuser-Busch visit, BBI International, publisher of Biomass Power & Thermal, surprised its tour guests with a few cases of beer reserved for the end of the day.

The next stop was the IESI MO Champ Landfill and while BBI didn’t provide complementary bags of trash, the 254-acre site proved to be an exciting location. Because of constant truck traffic, tour guests saw the landfill through the bus windows. A landfill gas recovery operation at the site provides renewable electricity for two asphalt plants, a commercial greenhouse, a concrete facility and a local high school. Plans for expansion of the landfill gas utilization system are slated for operation in August 2012 and will be carried out by electric company Ameren Missouri. The expansion will increase electricity production to about 15 megawatts (MW) and to about 60 MW in 2025, the landfill’s tour guide said

The site also serves as a limestone mine and one of its two landfills sits at the bottom of a 250-foot deep mining trench. The bus crossed a one-way bridge before driving partway into the enormous hole for tour attendees to view a landfill only partially full. A large portion of the black ground liner remained exposed with massive trucks pushing around the garbage piles.  

On the way off the site, the tour bus was required to take the same precautions as all other exiting traffic to minimize the amount of sediments and mud removed from the location. It entails driving through a strong sprinkler-type mechanism that essentially creates a white wall of recycled water.

Last, the group stopped at Innovative Energy Inc. to see its 2 MW model of its gasifier in the St. Louis suburb of Fenton. The system can gasify any carbon-based fuel, including wood, municipal solid waste, ag residue, energy crops, plastics, tires, shingles and paper. During the tour, though, the company was experimenting with some switchgrass pellets. CEO Glenn Foy explained that many biomass projects fall through because of feedstock issues. “We thought fuel flexibility was critical,” he said.

The site also has its own briquetting process and Foy displayed a jar full of biochar that he compared to tiny BBs. The gasifier itself is quite small, at about 4 feet in diameter and 15 feet tall. A yellow rope separated the tour guests from the gasifier’s processes, but several company employees spoke to the crowd about the system using diagrams and flow charts to illustrate its functions. Because it is a distributed energy system it doesn’t require transmission lines like wind, coal and hydropower to get the power from where it’s produced to where it will be used, they said.

Innovative Energy was founded in 2001 and has 27 worldwide patents, said Jim Neumeier, vice president of business development. The privately funded company completed its research and development phase at the end of 2009 and since 2010 has been marketing its technology, concentrating on five sectors: municipalities, military, international, commercial and industrial facilities that have waste streams.

Driving back to the city, tour guests discussed the compelling aspects of all the projects and wondered about the proprietary elements of Innovative Energy’s system and what might set it apart from other gasifiers. The company is also an exhibitor at the International Biomass Conference & Expo. For information on the event, click here.


View the original article here

08 May 2011

Councillors urged to reject food waste plant - The Surrey Herald

May 3 2011 By Carl Gavaghan

Oxfordshire-based waste company Agrivert has submitted plans to Surrey County Council for an 'anaerobic digestion plant' in Lyne.




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RUNNYMEDE borough councillors have been urged by their officers to object to plans for an 'anaerobic digestion plant' to be built in Lyne.


The plant could be built on a site where proposals for a giant waste burner were abandoned in 2009 after objections from councillors and residents.


Oxfordshire-based waste company Agrivert has submitted plans to Surrey County Council for the plant on land adjacent to Trumps Farm, in Kitsmead Lane.


A report that will go before RBC's planning committee on Wednesday, May 11 states that councillors should object to the proposals because: “The applicants have failed to demonstrate very special circumstances to allow inappropriate development within the Green Belt either that there is sufficient local need for the facility, not that there are not more appropriately located sited for the proposed facility.”


If given the go-ahead the company claims that the digester could take up to 48,500 tonnes of waste a year, which is less then a third of the rubbish that Surrey County Council planned for a giant incinerator on the same site.


An AD plant disposes of waste biologically by treating it with micro-organisms in an oxygen-free environment.


Harry Waters, commercial director of Agrivert, told the Surrey Herald that such digesters will become commonplace in the county.


"Surrey has a lot of waste and will need four or five of these plants to handle it all. There is a lot of commercial waste produced in the county, the majority of which is exported, which is obviously not environmentally-friendly."


The final decision on the plans will be taken by Surrey County Council later this year.


View the original article here

Countrystyle Recycling purchases Halstead Renewable Power Project - Invest in UK

Countrystyle Recycling Ltd recently acquired the Halstead Renewable Power Project (HRPP) from Glendale Power, and will now forge ahead with the development of an Anaerobic Digestion Plant at the Essex site, for which full planning permission has been granted.

The Halstead Project is an exciting new development for Countrystyle, a renewable power plant that will run on locally collected food waste to produce renewable electricity sufficient to power 3000 homes and enough heat for the future expansion of the adjacent industrial estate.

The project will also provide soil conditioner suitable for improving local clay soils and a greenhouse gas reduction to more than offset the total output of all of the town’s cars.

All of these outputs will come from materials that would otherwise go to waste, either via landfill or incineration.

Jeremy Elden, Managing Director of Glendale Power, said Countrystyle is an acknowledged leader in Organics Recycling and Glendale Power is looking forward to working together on this progressive scheme.

Elden reiterated that Glendale will be retained as a partner in the project, and will combine the two firms’ strengths to develop an AD plant that sets the highest standards.

Mat Stewart, Managing Director of Countrystyle, said Countrystyle believes that Anaerobic Digestion has the potential to deliver substantial environmental benefit by closing the loop in returning nutrients to the soil and recovering the energy from materials that would otherwise go to waste.

Detailed designs for the development will now be created, with construction beginning in early 2012, ready for the commissioning of the plant in late 2012.

Countrystyle Group consists of several integrated companies working in complete harmony to provide a comprehensive range of waste management & recycling services. From providing a skip hire service to one-off domestic customers to dealing with complete waste streams from large multinational companies, the capabilities of the Group are constantly expanding throughout the public and private sector.

Capable of handling and processing almost all forms of waste including WEEE and Hazardous Waste, Countrystyle tailors the most effective strategy for each business, offering a fully auditable approach which complies with all EU and Government waste legislation.

Countrystyle operates a network of its own waste transfer stations and materials recovery facilities, where collected waste and recyclables are managed by expert operatives and customer deliveries are accepted directly for treatment.

Countrystyle also operates specialist facilities for plasterboard recycling and wood recycling.

2nd May 2011


View the original article here

07 May 2011

Green: Waste-to-Electricity Plan Draws Mixed Response in N.Y. - New York Times (blog)

One of the new initiatives included in the recently updated version of Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg’s environmental agenda — a plan to solicit proposals to try out new technologies that convert garbage into heat and electricity –- is drawing mixed reviews from environmental groups.




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Waste-to-energy technologies are widely used in Europe, but have not caught on in a big way in this country, where most trash still goes to landfills. The Bloomberg administration wants to experiment with two specific technologies — anaerobic digestion and thermal processing – to convert solid waste into either electricity or fuel to reduce the use of landfills and the costs associated with transporting waste to them by truck and rail.


Anaerobic digestion uses microorganisms to break down waste and produce a biogas that can be combusted to generate electricity. Thermal processing uses heat to produce a synthetic gas and produce electricity.


Marcia Bystryn, executive director of the New York League of Conservation Voters, called waste-to-energy plants a plus that produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions than the current disposal system. “And you have this twofer,” she added. “You’re creating energy and disposing of waste.”


But groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council say that waste-to-electricity systems are not the best use of resources in New York City, given that it has a recycling rate of less than 20 percent. In Europe, they note, countries like Denmark and Germany that use the technology burn only the trash that cannot be recycled.

“Right now the focus of the Sanitation Department should be on resurrecting the city’s recycling program, finding better ways to handle food and yard waste and making the trash collection system more cost-effective and efficient,” said Eric A. Goldstein, a senior attorney with the council. “They have their hands full.”


PlaNYC, as the city’s environmental plan is known, states that the technologies will be part of a strategy that also envisions “robust” recycling programs. But one program the city has been hoping to expand, the recycling of plastics, may have to wait. Citing limited markets for certain types of plastic, the plan says the city will revisit the expansion of plastics designated for recycling “as markets evolve.”


View the original article here

06 May 2011

Digester Gas Engine: What Is It and What Are Its Benefits?


A digester gas engine-also referred to as a biogas engine-is an engine that turns natural gases produced by an anaerobic digester into electricity. Medium to large size structures that mix biodegradable wastes (e.g. sewage and food waste) to release their natural gasses, anaerobic digesters typically contain four levels on their interior: a mixing zone where most solid waste is slowly churned by a mixing device, a sludge zone, a liquid zone, and biogas zone at the top. Biogases are taken from the top of a digester and put through treatment that makes them "digestible" for a gas engine. Below, we look at the potential benefits of biogas production for entities that are able to take advantage of the process.

Elimination of gas bills

Perhaps the most obvious benefit of biogas production is the elimination of a facility's utility gas bill, as an anaerobic digester supplies all the gas a facility needs, and then some. Unlike utility power rates, the materials used to produce biogases are generally inexpensive and tend to remain at set prices.

Elimination of electric bills

When a facility turns digester gas into electricity, it may be able to eliminate its electric bill as well. This is often the case for two types of facilities: primary digesters, who have an ample supply of organic waste as a result of their line of work, and small to midsize facilities that have an adequate sized digestion engine and anaerobic digester.

Increased energy budget

By eliminating or reducing their annual gas/electric bills, facilities have more room in their energy budget. In some instances, facilities use their utility savings to invest in energy efficient technology that reduces their gas/electricity consumption, thus increasing the availability of biogases.

Opportunity to sell electricity

When facilities produce more electricity than they need, they can sell it to a utility provider for a preset price per kilowatt-hour, which varies by state. Depending on the amount of electricity produced, this opportunity could yield thousands of dollars a year.

Increased eco friendliness

The more a facility reduces its commercial energy consumption, the smaller its carbon footprint becomes. An anaerobic digester allows facilities to reduce or eliminate their reliance on utility power, thus increasing their eco friendliness.

Support for emergency power systems

Biogas is an ideal source of power for both gas powered generators and generators that run on a mixture of diesel and natural gas via a Bi-Fuel system.

When is biogas production a good idea?

Whether to pursue biogas production involves several considerations, particularly: the cost of implementing an anaerobic digester, the cost of delivering organic waste material if none is readily available, the cost of waste material if none is available, and the return on investment (ROI) of the project. When considering these and other aspects of biogas production, it helps to dialogue with entities that have insight into the advantages and disadvantages of the process for specific types of facilities, such as a generator services provider that specializes in digester gas engine servicing and implementation.








In my research on generator services, I've studied the cost benefits of implementing a digester gas engine.


How to Secure Long Term Contracts to Recycle Food Waste and be Profitable - San Francisco Chronicle (press release)

How to Secure Long Term Contracts to Recycle Food


Robin Sweere, Operation and Sourcing Manager at Quest Recycling, presented to a large crowd of food recycling operators, renewable energy scholars and EPA representatives how Quest Recycling successfully manages food waste recycling for its customers across all 50 states.




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(Video is about eWaste and is not connected directly to the text.)


"Quest Recycling is at the forefront of a new industry that allows customers to now view traditional waste as a resource", Robin said. "Today, organics materials (your produce, bakery, deli and dairy products) can effectively be recycled into nutrient rich composts or animal feed faster and cheaper than ever."


Robin explained why anaerobic digestion is of highest use. "Anaerobic digesters present low liability to the generator, they accept stream with meat, dairy and post-consumer by products, and generate renewable energy credits." "In addition, anaerobic digesters offer increased feedstock, a possible alternative source of revenue and increased gas production."


"You have to consider the pros and cons of long term contracts, both from the hauler and the digester's perspectives. For the Digester, a long term agreement will help secure financing, will facilitate the recipe quality insurance process and will ease the traffic patterns. However, you could miss on additional revenue should the market value increase and you will have to go through a lengthier contract process."


Quest Recycling understands well the needs of both the digesters and the haulers. Quest Recycling designs contract with balance clauses to help haulers and digesters achieve the highest yield.


About Quest Recycling LLC


Quest Recycling Services, www.questrecycling.com, is one of the nation's fastest growing full service recycling companies. Quest Recycling, which is based out of Frisco, Texas manages the recycling effort of over 7,500 locations nationwide.


Quest's customers span from automotive to industrial, fleet, municipalities, hospitality and foodservice industries. Quest also partners with www.earth911.com, providing consumers with information about recycling and local community resources.


Quest's provides nation-wide, one-stop recycling solutions for all waste streams to both companies and communities.


View the original article here

05 May 2011

Kent could get new biomass and anaerobic digestion facilities - Guttridge

Anaerobic digesters for food waste and biomass boilers could soon be providing Kent with green energy, if new plans are approved.


Proposals for a 300-acre green energy park near Sandwich have been submitted to Kent County Council, ThisIsKent.co.uk reports.




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The plans include biomass facilities, as well as a recycling centre for household, commercial and industrial waste and timber.

Gary Lever, development director for BFL Management Ltd, which has drawn up the designs for site owner Richborough A Ltd, says the proposals constitute a "world class" energy park.


"At this stage we are very keen to ensure our plans and aspirations for the site are drawn up in conjunction with Kent County Council and the local authorities, Thanet and Dover, as well as local residents and interest groups," he told the news provider.


This follows news that opposition to the proposed construction of a biomass plant has prompted a review into the plans by site owner Helius Energy.


Typical Guttridge equipment used in the biomass industry includes:


Conveyors – screw conveyors – chain conveyors – belt conveyors


James Smith
ADNFCR-2798-ID-800517162-ADNFCR


View the original article here

On-Farm Anaerobic Digester Trends In The United States - BioCycle magazine

BioCycle April 2011, Vol. 52, No. 4, p. 36 AgSTAR point person ruminates on the successes, challenges and future of livestock methane as viable renewable energy source.


By Dan Sullivan


U.S. EPAs AgSTAR is a voluntary outreach and educational program promoting the recovery and use of methane from livestock manure. EPA and USDA whose Rural Energy for America Program (REAP) and other mechanisms has helped fund on-farm biogas projects, have been working together since AgSTAR's inception in 1993 and in May 2010 signed an interagency agreement to promote digester systems nationwide. AgSTAR is also working closely with the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy and its Dairy Power Program, which signed a Memorandum of Understanding with USDA in December 2009 with the intent of helping reduce the carbon footprint of the dairy industry by 25 percent by 2020.


BioCycle caught up with AgSTAR National Program Manager Chris Voell just as his office had finished crunching the latest numbers related to trends in on-farm anaerobic digestion (AD) systems in the United States, AD Trends at a Glance). Voell offered some perspective behind the statistics regarding what is driving the growth of AD in America. In a nutshell, he says, if we want to realize the environmental and economic benefits that digester systems can bring, business models must be developed to make the projects viable (e.g., revenue, financing), a more conducive environment to attract investors must be created and energy policy has to be altered to be more supportive of smaller, distributed generation projects like AD. While government incentives and private investment are helping to drive growth, a handful of states are demonstrating how visionary policy is perhaps what is needed most.


"You look at places like Vermont and a few other states with policies and financial incentives that allow for investment in farm-based projects, and that?s where you find the digester system growth," he says. Voell points to volunteer programs such as Cow Power, a Central Vermont Public Service (CVPS) voluntary program that allows customers to purchase electricity generated from dairy digesters at a premium (the generating farms receive 4 cents per kilowatt hour if they participate in the program). He also touted the Vermont-based standard offer program, which guarantees 14 to 16 cents per kWh to participating projects. Vermont also has net metering rules that allow projects to flourish on smaller operations.


Programs such as these, Voell says, allow citizens the opportunity to encourage development of smaller renewable energy projects in their communities and realize the improved quality of life that they bring (odor control, enhanced revenue generation, air and water quality improvements). 2New York, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin are other states with equitable rate structures and utility and energy policies in place that have led to the growth of AD. But for a small or medium-sized farmers to invest in an AD system in most places in the country is not feasible," he elaborates. That's why farmers and project developers who are currently investing time and money are looking at larger farms and codigestion to realize economies of scale and a decent return on investment. Also, a major issue is that for investors and project developers, it's certainly not cookie cutter across the county. Every state and every utility has different requirements. This makes it very difficult to plan for long term investments.


Since the USDA first added an energy title to the federal Farm Bill in 2003, the agency has awarded more than $40 million in grants to more than 100 on-farm digester systems. About 20 AD projects have come online annually since 2003 (many of these received USDA funding assistance), accounting for more than 140 of the 167 currently in existence in the United States, according to AgSTAR data. ?One of the biggest reasons we have a start on the digester industry is the USDA?s REAP,? Voell says, adding that this and other federal assistance such as USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) EQIP (Environmental Quality Incentive Program) funds have been bolstered by state programs. These include Focus on Energy in Wisconsin, Cow Power in Vermont and programs of the California Energy Commission and NYSERDA (New York State Energy Research and Development Authority). Still, he says, much work remains to be done.


UTILITY RATES, REQUIREMENTS
Getting appropriate rates for the energy, while probably the single largest hurdle, is only one part of the challenge, he says. ?Interconnection standards and studies, and the fees charged for those by utilities, vary widely as well. These fees can often be enough to kill a project There are many cases where they have been multiple hundreds of thousands of dollars.


Net metering basically the deduction of an energy outflow from metered energy inflows is a frequently discussed issue with regard to energy offsets. While you might hear that 35 or 38 states have net metering as part of their energy policy, he says, "the actual details and application varies widely". He offers that a good net metering policy is one that allows for aggregation of all meters across the farm and contiguous properties, letting the farmer offset a higher level of energy use than they can in a lot of places. A bad net metering policy, he says, is where the farmer is required to pick a single meter to offset. Many digester projects will generate more energy than would be used by a farmer through one electricity meter.


There are typically multiple meters all across the farm, for example, at the barn, for the irrigation pumps, the farmer's residence, etc., Voell explains. "Say you are generating 100 kW from your digester project and your highest use at a single meter is 50 kW. You often cannot get credit for the remainder, and it is forfeited."


Some states, such as Pennsylvania and Vermont, go one step better with virtual aggregate metering, he adds, meaning that the meters do not have to be physically connected to allow for more energy use to be offset.


As a not-so-good example of utility policy and Voell was reluctant to name a specific state or utility he referenced a farmer ?down South? who abandoned the electricity generation portion of his AD system (the digester is working fine with the gas being flared) because the standby charges he had to pay when his system was down for regular operation and maintenance were so exorbitant that it basically obliterated any profit that might be realized in the project. Standby charges are a fee for the privilege of being hooked up to regular utility service when a self-generating system is shut down. When negotiating with utilities, pay attention to every detail,? he adds. ?Hire someone who is fluent in utility contract negotiations. When you get down into the weeds in terms of negotiating contracts, net metering, standby charges, interconnection fees ? that?s where the rubber hits the road.? Voell predicts this type of situation will happen less frequently as farmers become more savvy, these projects become more commonplace and support organizations such as AgSTAR become more involved.


NEW ENERGY POLICIES
Status quo policies built around centralized output of nonrenewables put up another major roadblock. "he way we?ve set up energy policy in this country is not conducive to the growth of distributed energy projects," he says. It's traditionally been built around fossil fuel generated electricity at a much larger scale. The policy paradigm needs to change if we want to see proliferation of these kinds of projects. Voell adds that the current difficulty is that energy policy is all done state by state. Sometimes the federal government steps in, but for the most part states and individual utilities set their own policies, he says. And policy change at any level comes slowly. It takes a champion to get it done.


He suggests several energy policy fixes that could help digesters along and allow smaller operations to be more economically viable. These include rates paid for the energy that recognize the broad suite of benefits these projects bring, streamlined permitting process and appropriate fees for interconnection and standby charges. If on the back end there's no return on investment, these projects aren't going to happen, he explains.


That's why we have 160 when there could be easily 10 or 20 times that many. Until we have a fundamental shift in business models, energy policy and public support, the transition to seeing hundreds or thousands of these projects grow in the near future will not occur. Energy policy is not set up, in most cases, to encourage these. I know of instances where it costs people 8 cents to generate energy through this process, and they receive 4 cents for it  that's not going to get it done.


Voell points to the 100 percent shift in production by the Big Three automakers at the behest of President Roosevelt to support the war effort during WWII and America winning the race to the moon as two examples of our country being able to make necessary innovations when circumstances require action. ?" think the country is trying to go in that direction in terms of energy usage and policy, but right now we are relying on market forces and volunteer efforts, which is not quite as commanding as FDR making a decision in time of war," Voell says.


ONE FARMER, MANY HATS
The reality today is that embarking on a digester project requires business acumen that includes an awareness of all the potential financial benefits, counsels Voell. These include energy production (gas production for direct use or to power a genset and produce electricity and heat), codigestion (bringing in organic waste materials to boost gas production and generate tipping fees) and use of the liquid digestate as fertilizer and the manure fibers as bedding material or for other beneficial purposes. Basically you have to cobble together every benefit you can get for these to make a project viable in today's environment,? he says, adding to that laundry list management of on-farm nutrients and odors. The way [odor control] translates to money is that when a dairy wants to add cows and the neighbors are happy about the operation, things tend to go much more smoothly.


There is no question that the digester route is more expensive than business as usual manure management, Voell says. The reality is that without government assistance up to this point at the state and federal level, we would not even have a start on the digester industry. The ultimate goal is to have projects that can generate revenue to pay the debt service with a reasonable profit. But in reality we heavily subsidize all the traditional energy sources in this country. If we would like to move toward alternatives like anaerobic digesters and biogas, we would have to expect to prime the pump for those new energy sources to be able to compete. If we want to achieve energy independence and energy security, helping promote systems like manure digesters offers an excellent way to get there. There is also a growing desire to be more self-sufficient at the local level and not always having to rely on large central infrastructure.


Benefits of these projects go well beyond energy generation, he says. They provide more stable revenues to farmers in rural communities. There's a direct greenhouse gas reduction benefit of less methane into the atmosphere. And they provide for a better quality of life for the people who live in these communities. As we talk about investment of state and federal dollars, we have to realize the comprehensive benefits that come out of these projects.


Helping other regional businesses such as food processors manage their wastes more sustainably is another plus, he adds. Everybody I talk to is looking for that potential if it can be done appropriately. Securing a year-round supply of organics is no small task, but I think it's a trend that's on the rise. And we're definitely seeing growth of third party owner/operated projects capital being brought in by a third party. This reduces the risk to the farmer, and it brings in technical expertise as well as expertise in contract negotiations. Nutrient management keeping nitrogen and phosphorus out of waterways has been another big driver, he notes.


ENERGY INTERDEPENDENCE
Backdropped by rising petroleum prices and dire times for other energy sectors such as nuclear power, Voell sees biogas from organics recycling as a growth industry with great, if largely untapped, potential. The recently formed American Biogas Council (ABC) is another leg of the stool in helping move the industry forward, he says. Without appropriate technology and service providers, this industry will not thrive. We're also seeing a definite convergence of the agriculture, livestock, waste management and organics recycling sectors. Folks in all of these sectors see anaerobic digestion as an opportunity to help them meet their goals of greenhouse gas reduction, green energy production, improved waste management, building a supply chain that's more sustainable and providing a home for the organics waste stream. It is definitely moving beyond just an idea at the farmer level.


Allison Costa, AgSTAR Program Manager
Copyright 2011, The JG Press, Inc.


View the original article here

04 May 2011

Anaerobic Digestion: Unaddressed Opportunity - RenewableEnergyWorld.com

The most common waste-to-energy applications in the U.S. include the combustion of municipal solid waste (MSW), landfill gas-to-energy, and the digestion of farm waste or waste water. An often overlooked waste-to-energy resource, however, is mixed organic waste (for example, food and yard waste) anaerobic digestion (AD). AD technologies comes in a variety of shapes and sizes, so for now, we've used assumptions provided by a dry fermentation (that is a digester that accepts higher-solids waste) technology provider.


The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that in 2008, 250 million tons of municipal solid waste (including organic and non-organic) was generated in the U.S. While 22 million tons of organic waste was diverted for composting, an estimated 43 million tons of organic waste was sent to landfills. The total electric and thermal power (assuming a combined heat and power application) associated with this organic waste is approximately 1 GWe and 1.4 GWth, respectively. The total electric output is equivalent to serving close to 1 million homes.


While composting may appear to be a direct competitor to AD for organic waste, the two are mutually beneficial because remaining digestate from the AD process can be composted and sold. In fact, composting facilities such as Cedar Grove Composting in Everett, Wash., are a primary target for new AD projects.




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European companies such as Germany's Viessmann (BIOFerm) and GICON Bioenergie GMBH and Austria's Entec Biogas GMBH have digester technology that is suitable to convert food waste, yard waste and other organic material into energy. Anaerobic digestion was first widely applied in Europe in the 1930 and 1940's and has a history of success due to beneficial waste management practices and energy policies. While the technology is fully commercial, the application in the U.S. has been limited to farm and wastewater treatment plant facilities. Given the greater land availability for landfills, the U.S. has enjoyed cheaper municipal waste disposal than densely populated Europe.


Take a large industrial or institutional facility, such as a naval base or university. The facility could consider converting its waste to energy to replace boiler fuel for steam generation or for combined heat and power (CHP). The facility can save on its cost of waste disposal while generating on-site, renewable energy. CHP analysis reveals a simple payback of 7 to 10 years, excluding incentives, which compares favorably to a waste combustion application, using the same analysis parameters, which has a payback of greater than15 years, even under the highest energy price scenario.


The lack of organic waste separation is the greatest logistical barrier for mixed organic waste AD project in the U.S. Similar to composting, AD conversion requires a specific organic waste composition and a sufficient supply, without which biogas output will be lower, and the project will be uneconomic.


The majority of the U.S. population still discards organic and non-organic waste into the same container. However, many U.S. universities, such as the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh, and local governments, such as the City of San Jose in California, have commissioned pilot studies or commercial projects for either composting and/or AD that require separation of organic waste from the regular waste stream.


Higher solids organic waste digester technology and its application are relatively new to the U.S., requiring education of new potential developers, policymakers and project-hosts in order for it to gain wider acceptance and adoption. Permitting can be a barrier if a state has no prior experience with this type of project, which is certainly the case in many states.


Successful implementation of AD faces its unique challenges in the U.S., but its outlook is positive. In fact, in mid-March, Harvest Power, one of the new dry fermentation AD project developers in the U.S., announced $51.7 million in funding, led by former Vice President Al Gore's investment firm. There will likely be higher demand for AD applications such as dry fermentation in the coming years due to the growing population, declining land availability for new landfills, a continued interest in renewable energy and pursuit of efficient resource use.


Given its greater land availability and more dispersed population, the U.S. has relied upon landfills for waste disposal in comparison to densely populated Europe, which focused on waste combustion and AD.


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03 May 2011

On-farm power plant nears big switch-on - Your Renewable News (press release)

A FARM-based anaerobic digestion (AD) plant is approaching milestone in its £30 million expansion programme.


The £3m AD plant in Warton, Lancashire, will start producing electricity next month and official opening ceremony will take place on May 21.




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(Video is not necessarily related to the text.)


Run by Farmgen, Carr Farm will be its first operational power plant. It is also building a second ‘sister’ plant near Silloth and has submitted planning applications for two other operations in Cumbria.


High Street giant Marks and Spencer has signed a five-year contract to buy the energy generated from the Warton plant at a fixed price as part of its ‘Plan A’ commitment to procure more renewable energy from small-scale energy sources.


Farmgen’s chief operating officer Ed Cattigan said: “We firmly believe Carr Farm will point the way forward for future farm-based AD plants across the UK.”


Established in 2009, Farmgen has put together an impressive consortium of expert UK-based firms to deliver its first tranche of AD plants, including Carr Farm. The consortium includes leading members of the Anaerobic Digestion and Biogas Association (ADBA).


Source: Farmers Guardian


View the original article here

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