Sludge Watch ==> California cows start passing gas to the grid

Maureen Reilly maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Sun Mar 9 20:30:34 EDT 2008



California cows start passing gas to the grid
Tue Mar 4, 2008 6:30pm EST

By Nichola Groom

RIVERDALE, California (Reuters) - Imagine a vat of liquid cow manure 
covering the area of five football fields and 33 feet deep. Meet 
California's most alternative new energy.

On a dairy farm in the Golden State's agricultural heartland, utility PG&E 
Corp began on Tuesday producing natural gas derived from manure, in what it 
hopes will be a new way to power homes with renewable, if not entirely 
clean, energy.

The Vintage Dairy Biogas Project, the brainchild of life- long dairyman 
David Albers, aims to provide the natural gas needed to power 1,200 homes a 
day, Albers said at the facility's inauguration ceremony.

"When most people see a pile of manure, they see a pile of manure. We saw it 
as an opportunity for farmers, for utilities, and for California," Albers 
said.

In addition to being a partner in the 5,000-head Vintage Dairy, Albers is 
also president of BioEnergy Solutions, the company that funded and built the 
facility which cost millions of dollars. PG&E is simply a customer and the 
companies declined to give details of project finances.

As cow manure decomposes, it produces methane, a greenhouse gas more potent 
than carbon dioxide. Scientists say controlling methane emissions from 
animals such as cows would be a major step in addressing climate change.

Enter the Vintage Dairy project. As luck would have it, methane can be 
captured and treated to produce renewable gas, and California regulators 
have directed PG&E and other utilities to make renewable energy at least 20 
percent of their electricity supplies by 2010.

PG&E expects to reach 14 percent this year, thanks in small part at least to 
its partnership with BioEnergy Solutions.

To tap the renewable gas from cow manure, the Vintage Dairy farm first 
flushes manure into a large, octagonal pit, where it becomes about 99 
percent water. It is then pumped into a covered lagoon, first passing 
through a screen that filters out large solids that eventually become the 
cows' bedding.

The covered lagoon, or "digester," is the size of nearly five football 
fields and about 33 feet deep. It is lined with plastic to protect the 
ground water and the cover, made of high density polyethylene, is held down 
at the edges by concrete. The digester's cover was sunken into the lagoon on 
Tuesday, but officials said it would be taut and raised in a few days as the 
gas collects underneath it.

Weights on top of the digester channel the gas to the small facility where 
it is "scrubbed" of hydrogen sulfide and carbon dioxide. The end product is 
"close to 99 percent pure methane" according to BioEnergy Chief Operating 
Officer Thomas Hintz.

Once it is treated, the gas is injected into PG&E's pipeline, where it will 
be shipped to a power plant in Northern California.

According to Albers, PG&E and California state officials, biogas is a major 
opportunity for dairy farmers to make extra revenue while helping the 
environment.

"There are a lot of lagoons like this in California that don't have lining 
in them," said James Boyd, commissioner and vice chair of the California 
Energy Commission. "There is a business case to be made for this ... climate 
change has really provided the incentive to do this."

Both BioEnergy Solutions and PG&E are actively courting dairy farmers, whose 
cow manure is now simply being used as fertilizer, allowing the methane to 
be released into the air as a greenhouse gas.

"With nearly 2 million dairy cows in California, the potential is great," 
said Roy Kuga, vice president of energy supply for San Fransisco-based PG&E. 
The company has a partnership with another company, Microgy, which is 
currently setting up biogas projects at three California dairies.

In practice, however, not every dairy could participate in such a project 
because some are not located close enough to the necessary gas transmission 
lines, PG&E officials said.

Still, for now there are plenty of dairies to get on board. A second dairy 
in Fresno county has already agreed to join the Vintage Dairy project and 
Albers estimated gas from the two dairies combined could power 2,500 homes a 
day. The Vintage Dairy facility could accommodate gas from up to two or 
three more dairies, depending on the size, officials said.

http://www.enn.com/energy/article/32239





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