Biomass To Biofuels
www.BiomassToBiofuels.com
Technology, Engineering, Products, Services and Information
We provide
"turnkey" Biomass to Biofuels solutions, and plan to be the leading provider of
Biomass to Biofuels systems which generate clean, renewable "BioMethane"
which in turn, provide a "Renewable
Energy Credit." We also provide
Biomass Gasifiers, Synthesis
Gas and Methane
Gas Recovery products and services which provide fuel for
generating renewable energy and power as well as fuel for our cogeneration and trigeneration plants.
BioMethane is
generated from Anaerobic Digesters,
Anaerobic Lagoons, Biomass
Gasification, Biomass Gasifiers,
Biogas Recovery,
BioMethane, Concentrated
Animal Feeding Operations Landfill
Gas to Energy, and Methane
Gas Recovery. Unlike most companies, we are
equipment supplier/vendor neutral. This means we help our
clients select the best equipment for their specific application.
This approach provides our customers with superior performance,
decreased operating expenses and increased return on investment.
We
provide Cooler, Cleaner, Greener Power
& Energy Solutions project development
services that are Kyoto Protocol compliant and generate clean energy and
significantly reduce carbon dioxide emissions. Unlike most companies, we are
equipment supplier/vendor neutral. This means we help our clients select the
best equipment for their specific application. This approach provides our
customers with superior performance, decreased operating expenses and
increased return on investment.
Renewable
Energy Technologies provides
project development services that generate clean energy and significantly
reduce greenhouse gas emissions and
carbon dioxide emissions. Included
in this are our
turnkey "ecogeneration" products
and services which includes renewable
energy technologies, waste to energy,
waste to watts and waste
heat recovery solutions. Other project development
technologies include; Anaerobic Digester,
Anaerobic Lagoon, Biogas
Recovery, BioMethane, Biomass
Gasification, and Landfill Gas To
Energy, project development services. Additional products and
services provided by Cogeneration Technologies includes the following power
and energy project development services:
-
Project
Engineering Feasibility & Economic Analysis Studies
-
Engineering,
Procurement and Construction
-
Environmental
Engineering & Permitting
-
Project
Funding & Financing Options; including Equity Investment, Debt
Financing, Lease and Municipal Lease
-
Shared/Guaranteed
Savings Program with No Capital Investment from Qualified Clients
-
Project
Commissioning
-
3rd
Party Ownership and Project Development
-
Long-term
Service Agreements
-
Operations
& Maintenance
-
Green
Tag (Renewable Energy Credit, Carbon Dioxide Credits, Emission Reduction
Credits) Brokerage Services; Application and Permitting
We
are Renewable Energy
Technologies specialists and develop clean power and energy projects that
will generate a "Renewable
Energy Credit," Carbon Dioxide
Credits and Emission
Reduction Credits. Some of our products and services solutions and
technologies include; Absorption Chillers,
Adsorption Chillers, Automated
Demand Response, Biodiesel Refineries,
Biofuel Refineries, Biomass
Gasification, BioMethane, Canola
Biodiesel, Coconut Biodiesel, Cogeneration,
Concentrating Solar Power, Demand
Response Programs, Demand Side
Management, Energy
Conservation Measures, Energy Master
Planning, Engine Driven Chillers,
Geothermal Heatpumps, Groundsource
Heatpumps, Solar CHP, Solar
Cogeneration, Rapeseed Biodiesel, Solar
Electric Heat Pumps, Solar
Electric Power Systems, Solar
Heating and Cooling, Solar
Trigeneration, Soy Biodiesel, Trigeneration,
and Watersource Heatpumps.
Unlike
most companies, we are equipment supplier/vendor neutral. This means we help
our clients select the best equipment for their specific application. This
approach provides our customers with superior performance, decreased
operating expenses and increased return on investment.
For more information: call us at: 832-758-0027
Biomass
to Biofuels
Introduction
to Biomass to Biofuels
Biomass, Biofuel, and Bioenergy are all being used today to describe an abundant renewable energy source, providing environmentally friendly or "green" power. Biomass
is the organic matter used to produce Biofuels. Biomass takes the form of grasses and grains, forest undergrowth and wood waste from the timber industry, landfill and municipal solid waste and animal, agricultural, and food processing waste. Bioenergy is the energy, including electric power and heat, derived from these
Biofuels.
The Biomass Industry and Biomass to Biofuels Opportunities To Make the
U.S. Completely Energy Independent
Like hydropower, wind and solar power, biomass energy is not new. For centuries, people have recognized the energy value of animal and agricultural waste such as wood, peat and manure, and have burned it mostly for heat. This practice continues today in many less developed countries. As our world became industrialized, our need for power increased. Coal and oil were the most plentiful and efficient fuels but also the dirtiest.
We are now coming full circle to rediscover biomass, and every day it seems another source is discovered. Some fuels can be introduced directly or co-fired with fossil fuels into generators as replacement fuels, but many must be converted either to gas or some pelletized form to achieve more efficiency to maximize Btu or combustion properties.
While research progresses to further reduce any harmful emissions from the biofuels, it is understood that biofuels inherently give off far fewer harmful emissions than fossil fuels. Therefore, it makes a lot of sense to introduce biofuels as replacements for fossil fuels.
Without a doubt, our fossil resources have been dramatically reduced as our demand for electricity has increased.
Over the last couple of years, we have reviewed plans for several projects using a wide variety of biomass sources. For example, projects include anaerobic digesters on dairy and swine farms, landfill methane capture, rice hulls and fruit processing plant waste, chicken litter, wood product pelletization and gasification, and ethanol production. Although technologies for burning solid and gasified fuels have been in operation for decades, the conversion processes from biomass to biofuels are constantly being tweaked to maximize energy output and reduce possible hazards. Additionally, equipment retrofits may be necessary to efficiently utilize some of the fuels.
Biomass resources provide widely varying heat and moisture contents. Each source brings its own set of problems. For instance, most wood, grasses and grains must be pelletized or gasified to realize maximum efficiency. Cellulose in woody products creates problems particular in rice straw and hulls as it creates slag which gums up machinery if not properly removed prior to introduction into the generator. Capturing gases from animal waste or gasifying biomaterials is a complicated process. Collection and transportation of these resources to processing points and generators is costly and limits feedstocks for most projects to within a 50-mile radius.
In converting biomass to biofuels, other products such as, fertilizer, gases and feedstocks can be collected and marketed to provide additional economic benefits, possibly offsetting collection and transportation costs. While solving some of the community’s environmental issues and providing employment, use of biomass fosters community development and economic development by working with farmer cooperatives, farmers, local businesses, and municipalities.
Animal Wastes
In New York State, 700,000 dairy cows produce $1.7 billion in milk annually or 56% of the State’s total agricultural receipts. At 40 pounds of waste per cow per day, the energy potential is astounding. Animal waste digestion offers many economic benefits. First, manure limits the size of the herd. By eliminating the animal waste on a farm, a farmer alleviates or eliminates environmental problems, such as odor and water pollution, and may be able to increase the size of his herd, thereby increasing his production and profits. If in fact the farmer captures and markets the by-products (fertilizer and gases from the process), he may further increase revenues. A large dairy farm could theoretically produce enough power to become energy self-sufficient and sell excess power back to the grid.
In a high temperature air-blown gasification process, excess dairy waste is converted to low-Btu fuel gas. Clean
Biomethane or synthesis
gas can be used by the farmer to produce electricity for his farm, or he may sell it to the local utility for additional income.
A North Carolina farrow and wean swine farm uses a digester with Biomethane recovery. Manure is handled as liquid in a pit discharge flush system. Process water added to the manure is biologically stabilized in a covered anaerobic digester where biogas is recovered. The biogas is combusted in a generator equipped for heat recovery with a boiler, generating 60-90 kW. Excess power is sold to a nearby utility through a power purchase agreement. This process provides fuel for an electric generator; recovered heat is used to heat the houses; and hot water is circulated through the mats in the farrowing house, all offsetting the demand for power and disposing of what would otherwise be a problem waste.
Land Fill Gas to Energy
Land Fill Gas to Energy bio methane is an excellent and frequently untapped resource. Most times gases are simply flared or burned in the atmosphere.
Biomethane is 21 times more
hazardous to the environment and climate than carbon
dioxide emissions. When captured, bio methane can be introduced into a generator to produce electricity and heat. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has an outreach program to help organizations tap this resource. The Landfill Methane Outreach Program (LMOP) provides lists of landfills and their potentials and provides analysis packages and checklists to help plan recovery programs.
Harvesting Grasses and Trees
In some areas fast growing grasses and trees such as switchgrass and willows, are grown specifically for energy. The Department of Energy has worked with several State energy agencies to promote the use of these products. One project in particular involves fast growing willows in western New York State, which are harvested as fuel for a coal-fired plant on Lake Erie. While the percentage of coal replaced may be small, the use of willows or grasses, could eliminate the need for some pollution control retrofits. A similar program in Iowa replaces 2% of a plant’s coal with pelletized switchgrass provided by a farmers’ cooperative.
Grains and Soybeans
A study by Enersol Resources of Manhattan, Kansas, estimates corn stover and wheat straw that could be removed from agricultural cropland without exceeding tolerable rainfall and wind induced soil erosion limits in 37 States from North Dakota to Texas and eastward. The study provides county-level data on removable residue quantities and national supply estimates for 1995-1997. On average, 47 million tons of corn stover and 8.8 million tons of summer and winter wheat were potentially available representing 20% and 8%, respectively, of the total produced in the United States. Oak Ridge National Laboratory in conjunction with this study estimated edge-of-field transport costs to include collection and baling. For about 24 million tons of corn stover and 4.4 million tons of wheat straw the cost is $25 per ton; for about 22 million tons of corn stover and 3.8 million tons of wheat straw the cost is $10 - 20 per ton.
A consortium in California and Texas has approached us with multiple projects using rice hulls and straw and fruit waste from a local cannery. Rice straw is currently left to decompose or
to be burned in the fields. In both cases air quality is compromised. By 2003, California will no longer allow these practices, forcing a solution. In the proposed project, three products are extracted from the rice hulls and straw in the process making it very attractive: low quality silica, ethanol, and lignin. Ethanol and silica can be sold. The high Btu value of lignin makes it a favorable fuel for power generation. An on-site generator powers the extraction process, and excess power is sold to the grid. The greatest drawback to the project is the unproved technology in cellulose removal.
Corn for many years has been used to produce ethanol. Now biodiesel fuel is being produced from soybeans to replace fuel oil in electric generators, without modifying the machinery. The flashpoint for biodiesel is 300° versus 125° for regular #2 diesel fuel. Biodiesel is nontoxic and biodegradable, and because of its higher carbon content, it combusts more efficiently, significantly reducing harmful emissions. In 2000, more than 100 million gallons of fuel oil was burned in cooperative-owned power plants, much of which could be replaced with biodiesel.
At the USDA’s National Agricultural Center (Agricultural Research Service) in Beltsville, Maryland, a good deal of research has been done on biodiesel fuels. Currently a fleet of 17 buses used at the Center is powered by biodiesel made from soybeans. The Center has also researched anaerobic digesters and has recently installed a small turbine running off the gases from the digester at its dairy farm.
Wood and Timber
Wood waste from the timber industry creates environmental problems which can be alleviated or eliminated if the potential for electric generation is realized. A study by the Energy and Resources Group of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory at Berkeley concentrates on Zimbabwe. Zimbabwe is a very small rural economy of 120,000 hectares of timber plantations facing escalating costs of electricity. The amount of waste products currently produced from the industry is about 500,000 cubic meters annually with a potential yield of about 20-25 MW. Factors which might lower the value or yield of the wood waste include variation in residue quantity available, moisture content of the residue, transportation distance and general recoverability. Current disposal methods including dumping at the sawmill, plantation or municipal dumpsites or open air burning, have serious environmental effects, such as runoff in streams and smoke affecting air quality. A typical large sawmill produces about 70 metric tons per day of sawdust, chips and off cuttings. With 20% conversion efficiency, each dry ton can produce 1 MWH. A sawmill producing 70 tons per day will be able to generate 70 MWH per day or 3MW and could supply its own energy and steam requirements.
The U. S. Forest Service has two programs for the removal of undergrowth in the National Forests. Controlled burns are performed periodically in the National Forests to clear out undergrowth which, if left alone, can fuel and spread forest fires. With rapidly changing weather conditions a controlled burn can quickly turn into a massive forest fire, as we have seen in the recent past with thousands of acres of precious forests going up in smoke. Instead of burning the undergrowth in the forest, another program removes it to the nearest road. The Forest Service
has recently begun collecting the undergrowth and delivers it to a biomass
gasification plant where it is converted to synthesis gas for co-firing in a coal-fired generator. The project expects yields of about 100 tons per day which is sufficient to produce just over 2 MW of generating capacity or 1.9 tons per MWH for 24 hours. The consortium will be looking for partners in this project.
Conclusions
While our energy needs continue to grow, our fossil and water resources dwindle and become more dear. Renewable power resources should be fully examined for their economic and environmental benefits along with preservation and wiser use of our resources.
Remember: One man’s trash is another man’s treasure. A nearby landfill, farm, or forest contains a powerful treasure -- maybe even a pot of gold.
Biomass
Gasification
What
is Biomass Gasification?
Biomass
Gasification is the process in which BioMethane
is produced in the BioMass Gasification process. The BioMethane
is then used like any other fuel, such as natural gas, which is not a
renewable fuel.
What are
Biomass Gasifiers?
Biomass gasifiers are
reactors that heat biomass in a low-oxygen environment to produce a fuel
gas that contains from one fifth to one half (depending on the process
conditions) the heat content of natural gas. The gas produced from a biomass
gasifier can drive highly efficient devices such as turbines and fuel
cells to generate electricity.
What
is BioMethane?
BioMethane is a renewable energy/fuel, with
properties similar to natural gas, produced from "biomass."
Unlike natural gas, BioMethane is a renewable energy.
The
cost of producing BioMethane, after installation of the BioMass
Gasification equipment used to produce BioMethane
(the process of making
BioMethane is called "BioMethanation") is called is
essentially free.
Again, unlike the price of natural gas, which has been around $6.00/mmbtu
for the past year.
What
is a "Bubbling Fluidized Bed"?
A
Bubbling Fluidized Bed is similar to a Circulating
Fluidized Bed in that both use a "bed" of inert material
(normally the bed is sand) which is then "fluidized" by
high-pressure combustion air.
The
primary differences between the Bubbling Fluidized Bed and the Circulating
Fluidized Bed systems are that the Bubbling Fluidized Bed normally
operates in a reduced atmosphere (with lesser amounts of combustion air).
Additionally, Bubbling Fluidized Bed technology does not have as great an
ability to absorb sulfur dioxide. Bubbling Fluidized Bed systems are
normally selected to burn lower-quality fuels with high volatile matter.
Bubbling Fluidized Bed units keep most of the sand in the lower furnace.
Circulating
Fluidized Bed fire the fuel with high fixed carbon and circulate the
hot combustion gases, along with a high-density sand stream, through the
entire unit. By adding calcium-rich material, such as limestone, the Circulating
Fluidized Bed will efficiently absorb sulfur dioxide, reducing overall
emissions.
What is a "Circulating
Fluidized Bed"?
A
Circulating Fluidized Bed
is a relatively new and evolving technology that has become a very
efficient method of generating low-cost electricity while generating
electricity with very low emissions and environmental impacts.
In a Circulating
Fluidized Bed combustion process, crushed coal is mixed with limestone
and fired in a process resembling a boiling fluid. The limestone removes
the sulfur and converts it into an environmentally-benign powder that is
removed with the ash.
Fluidized
bed boilers are capable of burning a wide range of fuels cleanly,
including biomass fuels such as wood waste.
More
About Biomass Gasification and BioMethanation Technology
The production and disposal of large quantities of organic and
biodegradable waste without adequate or proper treatment results in
widespread environmental pollution. Some waste streams can be treated by
conventional methods like aeration. Compared to the aerobic method, the
use of anaerobic digesters in processing these waste streams provides
greater economic and environmental benefits and advantages.
As
previously stated, BioMethanation is the process of conversion of
organic matter in the waste (liquid or solid) to BioMethane (sometimes
referred to as "BioGas) and manure by microbial action in the
absence of air, known as "anaerobic digestion."
Conventional digesters such as sludge digesters and anaerobic CSTR
(Continuous Stirred Tank Reactors) have been used for many decades in
sewage treatment plants for stabilizing the activated sludge and sewage
solids.
Interest
in BioMethanation as an economic, environmental and energy-saving waste
treatment continues to gain greater interest world-wide and has led to
the development of a range of anaerobic reactor designs. These
high-rate, high-efficiency anaerobic digesters are also referred to as
"retained biomass reactors" since they are based on the
concept of retaining viable biomass by sludge immobilization.
Biomass Gasification and the Production of BioMethane
Biomass is a renewable energy resource which includes a wide variety if
organic resources. A few of these include wood, agricultural
residue/waste, and animal manure.
Biomass Gasification is the process in which BioMethane is produced in
the BioMass Gasification process. The BioMethane is then used like any
other fuel, such as natural gas, which is not a renewable fuel.
Historically, biomass use has been characterized by low btu and low
efficiencies. However, today biomass gasification is gaining world-wide
recognition and favor due to the economic and environmental benefits. In
terms of economic benefits, the cost of the BioMethane is essentially
free, after the cost of the equipment is installed. BioMethane, probably
the most important and efficient energy-conversion technology for a wide
variety of biomass fuels. The large-scale deployment of efficient
technology along with interventions to enhance the sustainable supply of
biomass fuels can transform the energy supply situation in rural areas. It has the potential to become the growth engine for rural development
in the country.
Biomass Gasification Basics
Biomass fuels such as firewood and agriculture-generated residues and
wastes are generally organic. They contain carbon, hydrogen, and
oxygen along with some moisture. Under controlled conditions,
characterized by low oxygen supply and high temperatures, most
biomass materials can be converted into a gaseous fuel known as producer
gas, which consists of carbon monoxide, hydrogen, carbon dioxide,
methane and nitrogen. This thermo-chemical conversion of solid biomass
into gaseous fuel is called biomass gasification. The producer gas so
produced has low a calorific value (1000-1200 Kcal/Nm3), but can be
burnt with a high efficiency and a good degree of control without
emitting smoke. Each kilogram of air-dry biomass (10% moisture content)
yields about 2.5 Nm3 of producer gas. In energy terms, the conversion
efficiency of the gasification process is in the range of 60%-70%.
Multiple Advantages of Biomass Gasification
Conversion of solid biomass into combustible gas has all the advantages
associated with using gaseous and liquid fuels such as clean combustion,
compact burning equipment, high thermal efficiency and a good degree of control. In locations,
where biomass is already available at reasonable low prices (e.g. rice
mills) or in industries using fuel wood, gasifier systems offer definite
economic advantages. Biomass gasification technology is also
environment-friendly, because of the firewood savings and reduction in
CO2 emissions.
Biomass gasification technology has the potential to replace diesel and
other petroleum products in several applications, foreign exchange.
Applications for Biomass Gasification
Thermal applications: cooking, water boiling, steam generation, drying
etc.
Motive power applications: Using producer gas as a fuel in IC engines
for applications such as water pumping Electricity generation: Using
producer gas in dual-fuel mode in diesel engines/as the only fuel in
spark ignition engines/in gas turbines.
Publicly Owned Treatment Works ("POTW's") or Wastewater
Treatment Systems
More
and more, cities, counties and municipalities are faced with greater
environmental compliance issues relating to their municipally-owned
landfills, Publicly Owned Treatment Works ("POTW's") or
Wastewater Treatment Systems. A city's landfill and/or POTW
provides an excellent opportunity for cities to reduce their emissions
as well as provide an additional revenue stream. These facilities
may have valuable gases that our company recovers and pipes to one of
our clean, environmentally-friendly cogeneration or trigeneration energy
systems. We solve a city's environmental liabilities (air
emissions) and provide a new cash flow simultaneously. We offer
turn-key solutions for cities that includes the preliminary feasibility
analysis, engineering and design, project management, permitting and
commissioning. We provide very attractive financing packages for
cities that does not add to a city's liability, yet provides a valuable
new revenue stream. And, we are also able to offer a turn-key
solution for qualified municipalities that includes our company owning,
operating and maintaining the onsite power and energy plant.
At
the heart of the system is a (Bio) Methane Gas Recovery system similar
those used in Flare Gas Recovery or Vapor Recovery Units. Methane
Gas Recovery, Flare Gas Recovery, Vapor Recovery, Waste to Energy and
Vapor Recovery Units all recover valuable "waste" or vented
fuels that can be used to provide fuel for an onsite power generation
plant. Our waste-to-energy and waste to fuel systems significantly
or entirely, reduces your facility's emissions (such as
NOx
,
SOx, H2S, CO
, CO2 and other Hazardous Air Pollutants/Greenhouse Gases) and convert
these valuable emissions from an environmental problem into a new cash
revenue stream and profit center.
Methane
Gas Recovery and vapor recovery units can be located in hundreds of
applications and locations. At a landfill, Wastewaster Treatment
System (or Publicly Owned Treatment Works - "POTW") gases from
the facility can be captured from the anaerobic digesters, and
manifolded/piped to one of our onsite power generation plants, and make,
essentially, "free" electricity for your facility's use.
These associated "biogases" that are generated from
municipally owned landfills or wastewater treatment plants have low btu
content or heating values, ranging around 550-650 btu's.
This makes them
unsuitable for use in natural gas applications. When burned as fuel to
generate electricity, however, these gases become a valuable source of
"renewable" power and energy for the facility's use or resale
to the electric grid.
Additionally,
if heat (steam and/or hot water) is required, we will incorporate our
cogeneration or trigeneration system into the project and provide some,
or all, of your hot water/steam requirements. Similarly, at crude oil
refineries, gas processing plants, exploration and production sites, and
gasoline storage/tank farm site, we convert your facility's "waste
fuel" and environmental liabilities into profitable,
environmentally-friendly solutions.
Our
Methane Gas Recovery systems are designed and engineered for these
specific applications. It is important to note that there are many
internal combustion engines or combustion turbines that are NOT suited
for these applications. Our systems are engineered precisely for
your facility's application, and our engineers know the engines and
turbines that will work as well as those that don't. More
importantly, we are vendor and supplier neutral! Our only concerns
are for the optimum system solution
for your company, and we look past brand names and sales propaganda to
determine the optimum system, which may incorporate either one or more;
gas engine genset(s) or gas turbine genset(s), in cogeneration or
trigeneration mode - in trigeneration mode, we incorporate absorption
chillers to make chilled water for process or air-conditioning, fuel
gas conditioning equipment and gas compressor(s).
Our
turn-key systems includes design, engineering, permitting, project
management, commissioning, as well as financing for our qualified
customers. Additionally, we may be interested in owning and operating
the flare gas recovery or vapor recovery units. For these applications,
there is no investment required from the customer.
For
more information, please provide us with the following information about
the flare gas or vapor:
-
Type
of gas being flared or vented (methane, bio-gas, digester, landfill,
etc.).
-
Chromatograph
Fuel/Gas analysis which provides us with the btu's (heating value)
and the composition of the gas and its' impurities such as methane
(and the percentage of methane), soloxanes, carbon dioxide,
hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide, and any other hydrocarbons.
-
Total
amount of gas available, from all sources, at the facility.
What
is an Anaerobic Digester?
An Anaerobic Digester is a device for optimizing the anaerobic digestion of biomass and/or animal manure, and possibly to recover biogas
also referred to as BioMethane for energy production. Digester types include batch, complete mix, continuous flow (horizontal or plug-flow, multiple-tank, and vertical tank), and covered lagoon.
What is Anaerobic Digestion?
Anaerobic digestion is a biological process that produces a gas principally composed of methane (CH4) and carbon dioxide (CO2) otherwise known as biogas. These gases are produced from organic wastes such as livestock manure, food processing waste, etc.
Anaerobic processes could either occur naturally or in a controlled environment such as a biogas plant. Organic waste such as livestock manure and various types of bacteria are put in an airtight container called digester so the process could occur. Depending on the waste feedstock and the system design, biogas is typically 55 to 75 percent pure methane. State-of-the-art systems report producing biogas that is more than 95 percent pure methane.
The
U.S.
EPA AgSTAR Program Background
The
U.S. EPA AgSTAR is an outreach program designed to reduce methane emissions
from livestock waste management operations by promoting the use of biogas
recovery systems. A biogas recovery system is an anaerobic digester with
biogas capture and combustion to produce electricity, heat or hot water.
Biogas recovery systems are effective at confined livestock facilities that
handle manure as liquids and slurries, typically swine and dairy farms.
Anaerobic digester technologies provide enhanced environmental and financial
performance when compared to traditional waste management systems such as
manure storages and lagoons. Anaerobic digesters are particularly effective
in reducing methane emissions but also provide other air and water pollution
control opportunities. AgSTAR provides an array of information and tools
designed to assist producers in the evaluation and implementation these
systems, including:
-
Conducting farm
digester extension events and conferences
-
Providing “How-To”
project development tools and industry listings
-
Conducting performance
characterizations for digesters and conventional waste management
systems
-
Operating a toll free
hotline
-
Providing farm
recognition for voluntary environmental initiatives
-
Collaborating with
federal and state renewable energy, agricultural, and environmental
programs
Methane Emissions from Animal Waste
Management
Methane
emissions occur whenever animal waste is managed in anaerobic conditions.
Liquid manure management systems, such as ponds, anaerobic lagoons, and
holding tanks create oxygen free environments that promote methane
production. Manure deposited on fields and pastures, or otherwise handled in
a dry form, produces insignificant amounts of methane. Currently, livestock
waste contributes about 8 percent of human-related methane emissions in the
U.S.
Given the trend toward larger farms, liquid manure management is expected to
increase. For more information on international emissions, projections, and
mitigation costs, see International
Analyses.
Emission Reduction Technology: Anaerobic
Digestion
For
more detailed information on commercially available anaerobic digestion
technologies and their costs, download Managing
Manure with Biogas Recovery Systems: Improved Performance at Competitive
Costs (PDF, 4 pp., 4.4
MB
Accomplishments
The AgSTAR Program has been very successful in encouraging the development
and adoption of anaerobic digestion technology. Since the establishment of
the program in 1994, the number of operational digester systems has doubled.
This has produced significant environmental and energy benefits, including
methane emission reductions of approximately 124,000 metric tons of carbon
equivalent and annual energy generation of about 30 million kWh. The graph
below shows the historical use of biogas recovery technology for animal
waste management.
The
development of anaerobic digesters for livestock manure treatment and energy
production has accelerated at a very fast pace over the past few years.
Factors influencing this market demand include: increased technical
reliability of anaerobic digesters through the deployment of successful
operating systems over the past five years; growing concern of farm owners
about environmental quality; an increasing number of state and federal
programs designed to cost share in the development of these systems; and the
emergence of new state energy policies (such as net metering legislation)
designed to expand growth in reliable renewable energy and green power
markets.
In
the past 2 years alone, the number of operational digester systems has
increased by 30%. For more detailed information on anaerobic digester use in
the
U.S.
,
go to the Guide
to Operational Systems or see the AgSTAR
2003 Digest
The process of anaerobic digestion consists of three steps.
The first step is the decomposition (hydrolysis) of plant or animal matter. This step breaks down the organic material to usable-sized molecules such as sugar. The second step is the conversion of decomposed matter to organic acids. And finally, the acids are converted to methane gas.
Process temperature affects the rate of digestion and should be maintained in the mesophillic range (95 to 105 degrees Fahrenheit) with an optimum of 100 degrees F. It is possible to operate in the thermophillic range (135 to 145 degrees F), but the digestion process is subject to upset if not closely monitored.
Many anaerobic digestion technologies are commercially available and have been demonstrated for use with agricultural wastes and for treating municipal and industrial wastewater.
At Royal Farms No. 1 in Tulare, California, hog manure is slurried and sent to a Hypalon-covered lagoon for biogas generation. The collected biogas fuels a 70 kilowatt (kW) engine-generator and a 100 kW engine-generator. The electricity generated on the farm is able to meet monthly electric and heat energy demand.
Given the success of this project, three other swine farms (Sharp Ranch, Fresno and Prison Farm) have also installed floating covers on lagoons. The Knudsen and Sons project in Chico, California, treated wastewater which contained organic matter from fruit crushing and wash down in a covered and lined lagoon. The biogas produce is burned in a boiler. And at Langerwerf Dairy in Durham, California, cow manure is scraped and fed into a plug flow digester. The biogas produced is used to fire an 85 kW gas engine. The engine operates at 35 kW capacity level and drives a generator to produce electricity. Electricity and heat generated is able to offest all dairy energy demand. The system has been in operation since 1982.
Most anaerobic digestion technologies are commercially available. Where unprocessed wastes cause odor and water pollution such as in large dairies, anaerobic digestion reduces the odor and liquid waste disposal problems and produces a biogas fuel that can be used for process heating and/or electricity generation.
Technology
assessment
This section
describes the anaerobic digestion (AD) process, outlines guidelines for
assessing the feasibility of AD and biogas usage at a swine facility and
provides summary information on AD system performance and reliability.
Anaerobic
Digestion Technology Description
AD promotes the
bacterial decomposition of the volatile solids (VS) in animal wastes to
biogas, thereby reducing lagoon loading rates and odor. The primary
component of an AD system is the anaerobic digester, a waste vessel
containing bacteria that digest the organic matter in waste streams under
controlled conditions to produce biogas. As an effluent, AD yields nearly
all of the liquid that is fed to the digester. This remaining fluid
consists of mostly water and is allowed to evaporate from a secondary
lagoon, land-applied for irrigation and fertilizer value or recycled to
flush manure from the swine building to the digester.
The benefits of AD
include:
-
Odor
reduction;
-
Reduction
in the biological oxygen demand of treated effluent by up to 90
percent, reducing the risk for water contamination;
-
Improved
nutrient application control, because up to 70 percent of the nitrogen
in the waste is converted to ammonia, the primary nitrogen constituent
of fertilizer;
-
Reduced
pathogens, viruses, protozoa and other disease-causing organisms in
lagoon water, resulting in improved herd health and possible reduced
water requirements; and
-
Potential
to generate electricity and process heat.
AD takes place in
three steps: hydrolysis, acid formation, and methane generation. During
the first step, hydrolysis, bacterial enzymes break down proteins, fats
and sugars in the waste to simple sugars. During acid formation, bacteria
convert the sugars to acetic acid, carbon dioxide and hydrogen. Then the
bacteria convert the acetic acid to methane and carbon dioxide, and
combine carbon dioxide and hydrogen to form methane and water.
Digester
technologies that can be used to collect biogas from swine facilities
include:
-
Covered
anaerobic lagoons,
-
Complete
mix digesters and
-
Sequencing
batch reactors.
Although a
sequencing batch reactor has been used for AD at one swine facility in the
United States
, this technology is considered to be experimental, and thus is not
included in this report. This report focuses on technologies that have
verifiable performance characteristics, namely, covered anaerobic lagoons
and complete mix digesters.
Appendix B provides
contact information that can help producers find AD system
designers/installers, odor control technologies, generators, heating and
cooling equipment, and other information to help manage air and water
quality at hog facilities.
Covered lagoon
digesters are the simplest AD system. These systems typically consist of
an anaerobic combined storage and treatment lagoon, an anaerobic lagoon
cover, an evaporative pond for the digester effluent, and a gas treatment
and/or energy conversion system. Figure 1 shows a typical schematic for a
floating covered anaerobic lagoon.
Source: EPA. (July 1997). AgStar Handbook: A Manual for Developing Biogas
Systems at Commercial Farms in the
United States
. EPA 430-B-97-015.
Washington
,
DC
. pp. 1-3.
Figure 1 .
Covered anaerobic lagoon digester
Covered lagoon
digesters typically have a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 40 to 60
days. The HRT is the amount of time a given volume of waste remains in the
treatment lagoon. A collection pipe leading from the digester carries the
biogas to either a gas treatment system such as a combustion flare, or to
an engine/generator or boiler that uses the biogas to produce electricity
and heat. Following treatment, the digester effluent is often transferred
to an evaporative pond or to a storage lagoon prior to land application.
Climate affects the
feasibility of using covered lagoon digesters to generate electricity.
Engine/generator systems typically do not produce sufficient waste heat to
maintain temperatures high enough in covered lagoon digesters in the
winter to sustain consistently high biogas production rates. Using propane
or natural gas to provide additional heat for the lagoon contents is
typically not an economically viable option. Without that additional heat,
most covered lagoon digesters produce less biogas in colder temperatures,
and little or no gas below 39 FACE= "Symbol">° F. As a
result, covered lagoon digesters are most appropriate for use in warm
climates if the biogas is to be used for energy or heating purposes.
Complete mix
digester systems consist of a mix tank, a complete mix digester and a
secondary storage or evaporative pond. The mix tank is either an
aboveground tank or concrete in-ground tank that is fed regularly from
underfloor waste storage below the animal feedlot. Waste is stirred in the
mix tank to prevent solids from settling in the waste prior to being fed
to the digester. The complete mix digester is essentially a
constant-volume aboveground tank or in-ground covered lagoon that is fed
daily from the mix tank. Complete mix digesters with in-ground lagoons
often employ covers similar to those used in covered lagoon digesters. In
the digester, a mix pump circulates waste material slowly around the
heater to maintain a uniform temperature. Hot water from an
engine/generator cogeneration water jacket or boiler is used to heat the
digester. A cylindrical aboveground tank, such as that shown in Figure 2,
optimizes biogas production, but is more capital intensive than in-ground
tanks. The only operating AD system in
Colorado
that recovers methane for energy use is a complete mix digester, located
at Colorado Pork LLC near
Lamar
,
Colorado
.
Source:
EPA. (February 1997). AgStar Technical Series: Complete Mix Digesters –
A Methane Recovery
Option for All Climates. EPA 430-F-97-004.
Washington
,
DC
.
Figure 2 . Complete
mix digester schematic
Complete mix
digesters have an HRT of 15 to 20 days, which means that complete mix
digesters can reduce the overall lagoon volume required for waste storage
and treatment. This makes complete mix digesters comparable to covered
lagoon digesters in cost, despite the increased complexity of stirring,
mixing and plumbing components. In addition, biogas production rates, and
therefore heat and electricity production, are greater and more consistent
than for covered lagoons. This can help reduce system payback periods
compared to covered lagoon systems. Like covered lagoon systems, digester
effluent from complete mix digesters is frequently stored in evaporative
ponds or storage lagoons.
System
Requirements
This section
provides guidelines for conducting a preliminary assessment of the
feasibility of using AD at a swine facility. Although AD system
requirements will vary depending on the application and system design,
there are some rule-of-thumb measures that should be noted when assessing
the feasibility of AD at a given location. For AD to potentially be
technically feasible and cost-effective, a swine facility should:
-
Simultaneously
house at least 2,000 animals with a total live animal weight of at
least 110,000 pounds,
-
Have
no more than 20 percent variation in animal population throughout the
year,
-
Collect
waste at one central location such as an underfloor pit,
-
Collect
waste daily or every other day, or can convert to an equivalent
collection system,
-
Have
manure free of large amounts of bedding or other foreign materials,
and
-
Have
some manure storage capability to maintain a steady digester feedstock
supply
If the above
characteristics are present, the facility is a possible candidate for AD.
Many pre-existing waste storage and treatment lagoons are too large to
practically or cost-effectively employ covers over their entire area.
Partial covers may be an option to recover methane from these older
systems, as an alternative to installing a completely new storage and
treatment lagoon system.
If energy recovery
is to be employed, methane production and gas quality should be considered
and compared to energy requirements at the facility. Daily biogas
production at installed farm-based anaerobic digesters in the
United States
varies from 24,000 to 75,000 cubic feet, or an energy equivalent of 13 to
42 million British thermal units (Btu) (assuming 55 percent methane
content for biogas). Covered lagoon digesters and complete mix digesters
differ in their methane production characteristics, and energy conversion
systems that rely on methane from anaerobic digesters should be chosen
according to the end-use objective for the system. Complete mix digesters
can produce heat and electricity at a constant rate throughout the year
because heat recovery can be used to heat the digesters in the winter.
Covered lagoon digesters can consistently produce biogas only in months
when the temperature exceeds 39 degrees Fahrenheit.
Facilities that are
located south of the line of climate limitation in Figure 3 are usually
warm enough for cost-effective energy recovery from covered lagoon
digesters. In most cases, facilities north of the climate line in Figure 3
are too cold for cost-effective energy recovery from covered lagoon
digesters. Complete mix digesters can be used in cold or warm climates. If
odor control is the only objective, either covered lagoon or complete mix
digesters may be used, but odor control will be less effective in the
winter for covered lagoon digesters south of the line of climate
limitation in Figure 3. In general, complete mix digesters are the most
appropriate choice for use in
Colorado
.

Source: EPA. (July 1997). AgStar Handbook: A Manual for Developing Biogas
Systems
at Commercial Farms in the
United States
. EPA 430-B-97-015. pp. 4-12.
Figure 3 . Line of
climate limitation for biogas energy recovery
Table 2 shows which
digesters are appropriate for the waste collection strategies at covered
swine facilities. Complete mix digesters can operate with a waste total
solids (TS) percentage between 3 and 10 percent, while covered lagoon
digesters can use waste with a TS percentage less than 2 percent.
Table
2 . Matching a digester to existing waste collection practices
|
Collection
system
|
Percent TS
required
|
Digester type
|
Suitable
climate
|
|
Scrape
|
3-8
|
Complete mix
|
Warm or cold
|
|
Pit storage
|
3-8
|
Complete mix
|
Warm or cold
|
|
Flush
|
<2
|
Covered lagoon
|
Warm
|
|
Pit recharge
|
<3
|
Covered lagoon
|
Warm
|
|
Gravity
drainage
|
|
|
|
|
Pull
plug
|
<2
|
Covered lagoon
|
Warm
|
|
Managed
pull-plug
|
3-6
|
Complete mix
|
Warm or cold
|
Source – Adapted
from: EPA. (July 1997). AgStar Handbook: A Manual for Developing Biogas
Systems at Commercial
Farms in the
United States
. EPA 430-B-97-015. pp. 4-15.
Appendix C describes
each of the various waste collection technologies listed in Table 2.
Biogas
Utilization Options
This section
discusses some of the biogas utilization options that are available for
use with AD. Electricity generation with waste heat recovery
(cogeneration) and direct combustion and use in equipment that normally
uses propane or natural gas are the two primary options for biogas
utilization. Electricity generated using biogas can be generated for
on-farm use or for sale to the electric power grid if an economically
attractive power purchase agreement can be negotiated through the local
utility or rural electric cooperative. Direct combustion allows the gas to
be used in existing equipment that normally uses propane or natural gas
such as boilers or forced air furnaces with minor equipment modifications.
Combustion is usually a seasonal use for biogas, as most boiler and
furnace applications are only required during the winter. The EPA FarmWare
manual describes some characteristics of engine/generator and direct
combustion systems that can be used with biogas. The following subsections
draw from the FarmWare manual to provide some basic information about the
use of these systems at covered swine facilities and other farm
applications.
Electricity
Generation
Commercial
electricity generation systems that use biogas typically consist of an
internal combustion (IC) engine, a generator, a control system and an
optional heat recovery system.
IC engines designed
to burn propane or natural gas are easily converted to burn biogas by
adjusting carburation and ignition systems. Such engines are available in
nearly any capacity, but the most successful varieties are industrial
engines that are designed to work with wellhead natural gas. A
biogas-fueled engine will normally convert 18 to 25 percent of the biogas
Btu value to electricity.
Two types of
generators are used on farms: induction generators and synchronous
generators. Induction generators operate in parallel with the utility and
cannot operate as a stand-alone power source. Induction generators derive
their phase, frequency and voltage from the utility. Synchronous
generators operate as an isolated system or in parallel to the utility,
and require more sophisticated intertie systems to match output to utility
phase, frequency and voltage.
Control systems are
required to protect the engine and the utility. Control packages are
available that can shut the engine off due to mechanical problems, utility
power outage or utility voltage and frequency fluctuations, or in the
event that excess power is generated that the utility will not accept.
Generators that operate in parallel with the utility system, such as
induction generators, require an intertie system with safety relays to
shut off the engine and disconnect from the utility in the event of a
problem. Intertie negotiations with a utility for induction generators are
typically much easier than for a synchronous generator, due to the level
of control the utility has over the characteristics of power entering the
grid from an induction generator. The primary advantage of a synchronous
generator is its ability to act as a stand-alone power source. However, if
operated as an isolated system, a synchronous generator must be oversized
to meet the highest electrical demand, while operating less efficiently at
average or partial loads. Due to the system size and more complicated
control requirements, a synchronous generator operating as an isolated
system is typically more expensive than an induction generator.
Biogas engines
reject approximately 75 to 82 percent of the energy input as waste heat.
This waste heat can be used to heat the digester and/or provide water or
space heat to the facility. Commercial heat exchangers can recover waste
heat from the engine water cooling system and the engine exhaust,
recovering up to 7,000 Btu/hour for each kW of generator load. Waste heat
recovery increases the energy efficiency of the system to 40 to 50
percent.
Emerging new
digester and distributed electricity generation technologies could create
new opportunities for on-farm electricity generation using biogas.
Numerous companies are entering the Biomethane
production marketplace with technologies that include Anaerobic
Digesters and Biomass Gasification.
And when Biomethane fuels cogeneration
or trigeneration power plants, there are
no net additions of carbon dioxide
emissions or greenhouse
gas emissions, and these plants then produce "pollution
free power."
Ongoing research and
development is focusing on the use of microturbines and fuel cells for
converting biogas to electricity. Microturbines are high-speed,
small-scale (typically less than 100 kW) gas-driven turbine systems that
produce electricity efficiently, have low emissions and require little
maintenance. Several companies are working on
developing other technologies that can
use the Biomethane from animal waste, landfill gas and
Biomass Gasification as its
fuel source. Fuel cells are an emerging technology that operate, in
principle, like a battery, but do not run out of charge. Instead, fuel
cells equipped with a fuel reformer can use any type of hydrocarbon fuel,
and run continuously as long as fuel is available. Fuel cells can convert
fuel to electricity at efficiencies close to 40 percent, compared to 30
percent for the most efficient engine. In addition, fuel cell emissions
include heat, some of which can be recovered for other applications,
water, and carbon dioxide.
Direct
Combustion
Direct combustion of
biogas on-site in a boiler or forced air furnace can provide seasonal heat
to nurseries, farrowing rooms and other facilities at a swine facility. A
cast iron natural gas boiler can be used for most farm boiler
applications. The air-fuel mixture will require adjustment and burner jets
will need to be enlarged for use with low-Btu gas. Cast iron boilers are
available in many sizes, from 45,000 Btu/hour and up. Untreated biogas may
be used, but all metal surfaces of the boiler housing should be painted to
prevent corrosion. Flame tube boilers with heavy gauge flame tubes may be
used if the exhaust temperature is maintained above 300 FACE=
"Symbol">° F to prevent condensation. Forced air furnaces
can be used in place of direct fire room heaters, but biogas must be
treated to remove hydrogen sulfide because of potential corrosion problems
in metal ductwork.
System
Performance and Benefits of AD
There are several
measures of waste management system performance that are relevant for
producers considering the use of AD. These include:
-
Odor
control,
-
Water
quality protection
-
Energy
production.
AD is the only waste
management strategy available that provides the option to recover methane
for energy production.
The APCD has
determined that the minimum standard for compliance with odor control
regulations for waste vessels and impoundments is an 80 percent reduction
in all odor-causing gases, including hydrogen sulfide, ammonia and
volatile organic compounds from waste vessels or impoundments. Table 3
compares the effectiveness of some of the odor control methods being
implemented at covered swine facilities in
Colorado
. Lagoon covers and AD are among the most effective means of reducing
odors from waste storage and treatment systems. However, several
strategies may be combined to increase the effectiveness of individual
odor control strategies at a facility. As an example, feed additives can
be used in conjunction with biofilters, surface aeration or solids
separation to increase overall odor control from waste storage and
treatment lagoons. In addition, any lagoon odor control technology should
be accompanied by an overall odor management program using best management
practices as described in Appendix D.
Table
3 . Odor control effectiveness of management strategies for
anaerobic lagoons
|
Odor control
technology
|
Percent (%)
odorous gas emissions reduction
|
|
Feed
processing/additives
|
|
|
Grinding
feed
|
5-12
|
|
Wet-feeding
hogs (3:1 water to feed)
|
23-31
|
|
Reducing
sulfur-containing amino acids
|
49-63
|
|
Adding
fiber (soybeans, hulls to diet)
|
Up
to 68
|
|
Biofilters
|
50
|
|
Solids
separation
|
50-60
|
|
Soil injection
of waste upon land application
|
50-80
(land application odors only)
|
|
Surface
aeration
|
Up
to 85
|
|
Aerobic cap
|
Up
to 90
|
|
Lagoon
additives
|
Up
to 90
|
|
Lagoon covers
|
80-90
|
|
Anaerobic
digestion
|
80-90
|
|
Composting
|
Up
to 100 for well-managed systems
|
Source: Iversen,
Kirk and Jessica Davis. (February 1999). Innovations in odor management
technology.
Colorado
State
University
. Agricultural and Resource Policy Report. APR-99-02.
Fort Collins
,
CO
.
In addition to
regulating odors from waste lagoons, the new odor control regulations have
requirements for waste that is applied to agricultural land. The new
regulations for waste treatment at covered swine facilities require that
waste applied to agricultural land and not injected be treated to remove
at least 65 percent of the TS and over 90 percent of the total volatile
fatty acids or 60 percent of total VS. If not treated, waste applied to
agricultural land must be injected or knifed into the soil upon
application. Land application is not permitted between November 1 and
February 28. Of the waste management strategies in Table 3, four will help
reduce the TS and VS content prior to land application.
-
Wet-feeding,
-
Solids
separation,
-
AD
and
-
Composting.
Wet feeding can
reduce the TS and VS by a value equal to the dilution rate of the feed
(i.e., 3:1 ratio of water to feed). However, introducing this type of
feeding system increases water requirements and may increase required
anaerobic lagoon volumes. Solids separation can reduce TS by 30 to 45
percent. Solids separation methods include screen separators, mechanical
presses, settling tanks, settling basins, vacuum filters and many other
means. An efficient AD installation will reduce the TS percentage by up to
76 percent and VS by up to 90 percent. Of the above technologies, AD with
covered anaerobic lagoons is the only one the APCD considers a proven
technology because of their odor control effectiveness. Therefore, unlike
the other options above, covered anaerobic digesters do not have to meet
the additional testing requirements for technologies that the APCD
considers experimental.
Composting may or
may not meet the TS requirement because it often involves the addition of
a bulking agent to increase TS to optimize waste decomposition. However,
composting can be effective at controlling odors and reducing pathogens.
The APCD is presently reviewing the compliance status of one facility that
uses composting. Composting has applications besides manure treatment for
livestock facilities. The Colorado Governor’s |