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Sunday Reading
Biogas Plants
INDUSTRY BOOST TO KITCHEN WASTE
By Radhakrishna Rao
New Delhi, October 11, 2009
Kitchen waste need no longer be thrown in dustbins.
Instead, it could be made good use of like some corporate
houses and top firms are doing in the South. By setting up
kitchen waste biogas plants at their complexes, managements
have found a solution to disposing off food waste and
importantly are able to generate clean energy for cooking in
their canteens and cafeterias.
It started with the Mysore-based Centre For Renewable Energy
and Sustainable Technologies (CREST), a unit of the National
Institute of Engineering (NIE), getting involved in
popularizing these biogas plants to provide cooking gas for
households and corporate canteens. And it has made a
beginning.
How does it work? According to its spokesman about 2-kg of
kitchen waste including food left-overs used in the digester
provide 500-gms of methane. And, installing a biogas plant is
the easiest and most cost-effective way to make use of large
piles of kitchen and other wastes. Depending upon the user
requirement, the capacity of the biogas digester can be scaled
up appropriately. Moreover, the residue in the digester turns
out to be rich source of organic manure that can be profitably
used in gardens and landscaping.
According to Enzen Global Solutions, which helps corporates
and industry to set up biogas plants working on organic wastes
including kitchen wastes, all organic wastes that include
food, vegetables and leaves have the potential to generate
methane gas in anaerobic conditions. The waste when fed into a
digester starts the process of anaerobic digestion of organic
material to yield methane through the process of bio-methanation.
Apparently, “a 350-500-kg, plant can generate gas equal to one
LPG cylinder.”
In Bangalore, many of the high-tech parks and corporate
complexes are falling back on kitchen waste compact biogas
plant. For instance, Velankanni Tech Park, which employs 4,000
people produces a waste food in its canteen to the extent of
100-kg plus per day. The waste food disposal here was mainly
dependent on an external contractor. As such this tech park
with the assistance of Enzen set up a kitchen waste biogas
plant with a capacity of 250-kg wastes per day and an
investment of Rs.50,000. “We are not only saving Rs.200 daily
on the disposal of waste but also generating about 25-kg of
cooking gas and saving about Rs.20,000 a month” says a
manager.
Enzen is also assisting Vydehi Institute of Medical Sciences
and Research Centre in Bangalore to set up a 300-kg capacity
biogas plants. “Large capacity plants can also earn additional
revenue for carbon credits,” says Ram Kumar.
Similarly, the software and IT giant Wipro also operates a
3-tonne capacity biogas plant at its campus in the Electronics
City of Bangalore. ”We saw this as a great opportunity to
reuse the food wastes from various cafeterias in the campus.
The plant converts about 200-kg of food wastes into biogas on
a daily basis, and in the process saving upto 16 LPG cylinders
at full load”, says its official at its Environmental
Division. He also notes that “disposal of waste at the source
of generation and low sludge production are other advantages”.
India’s leading software and consultancy firm TCS at its
Yantra Park on the outskirts of Mumbai operates a one tonne
per day capacity biogas plant. “Based on the success of this
plant, we are planning similar projects at all our new
campuses and also at existing facilities. Provision of biogas
plant is now a part of standard design of new facilities” says
its Head, health, safety and environment.
Interestingly, this concept of kitchen waste biogas plants is
an offshoot of a much larger plan at the national level. The
country’s National Project on Biogas Development, launched in
1981-82, which was subsequently renamed National Biogas and
Manure Management has so far been able to get around 4-million
family type biogas plants installed as against the existing
potential for 12-million digesters. The programme’s objective
is to provide clean and efficient fuel for cooking along with
organic manure to rural households. Equally important goal is
to mitigate the drudgery for the rural women and reduce
pressure on forests as a source of fuel wood.
However, the achilles heel of this programme is use of cattle
dung as the feedstock to generate methane, considered a
non-polluting and carbon dioxide-neutral fuel. For a family
type biogas digester (technology that takes advantage of the
energy that is naturally present in animal waste and kitchen
trash), to be in operational trim at least 40-kg of dung is
required on a daily basis. This implies that a rural household
should own at lest six-eight cattle heads.
Moreover, because the dung has a retention period of 40 days,
the biogas plants need to be large. As such, limitations in
terms of space, investment and absence of sufficient number of
animals have gone to slow down the process of popularizing
family type biogas plants in the country. And, what‘s more the
process of mixing the dung with water to prepare the feedstock
is considered a tedious job by many rural households.
With a view to overcome the limitations associated with the
family type biogas digester, the Pune-based Appropriate Rural
Technology Institute (ARTI) came out with the innovative
technology of alternative high calorie feedstock that is rich
in starchy materials This feedstock has been found be more
efficient in terms of the methane generated and also easy to
handle. The feedstock that can be fed into these biogas
digesters included kitchen waste, seed of any plants as well
as oil cake of non edible oilseeds.
According to ARTI, this feedstock is capable of generating
about 250-kg of methane per tonne of feedstock (on the basis
of dry weight). More importantly, the reaction takes just one
day to complete. It has been computed that the use of 2-kg of
this feedstock on daily basis is good enough to provide
cooking fuel needed by a family of five. More innovations are
truly welcome. --- INFA
(Copyright India News & Feature Alliance)
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