The World's #1 Renewable Energy Network for News & Information
Sign In or Register
Renewable Energy World Logo
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
  • Sections
    • Home
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Solar
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Wind
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Geothermal
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Bio
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Hydro
      • News
      • Opinion & Commentary
      • Featured Blogs
      • Research & Reports
      • Video
      • Press Releases
      • All Blogs
      • Events
      • Products
      • Finance
    • Careers
    • Companies
      • Company Directory
      • Press Releases
      • Products
      • Events Calendar
      • White Papers
    • Webcasts
      • Upcoming Webcasts
      • Featured Webcasts
      • Archived Webcasts
      • Events Calendar
    • White Papers
    • Magazines
      • Renewable Energy World
      • Wind Technology
      • Large Scale Solar
      • Hydro Review
      • HRW - Hydro Review Worldwide
      • Renewable Energy World (North America Edition)
      • Photovoltaics World
    • Awards
  • Account
    • Sign In
    • Register
  • Search

Biogas Flows Through Germany's Grid Big Time

Jane Burgermeister
July 17, 2008  |  21 Comments

Print

The 2nd biggest biogas plant in the world to feed gas directly into the national gas grid is set to go into operation in eastern Germany at the beginning of 2009.

The plant at Konnern will feed 15 million cubic meters (m³) of biomethane into the national grid for use by customers anywhere in Germany. Experts say it is the start of a boom in biogas as the country's energy providers increasingly look to home-produced biogas to reduce their dependence on natural gas imported from Russia.

In 2007, there were 1280 megawatts (MW) of installed biogas capacity and about 3,750 biogas plants in Germany.

As much as 20 percent of Germany's natural gas needs could be supplied from biogas by 2020, according to Andrea Horbelt of the German Biogas Association.

Horbelt said that some studies predicted that Germany could even supply its entire natural gas needs using biogas if it were able to tap the agriculture potential of Eastern Europe with sufficient efficiency. But for now the focus is on exploiting the potential in Germany where a well-developed national grid facilitates biogas transport.

"Biogas is the market of the future because it allows energy to be produced and transported economically and in a decentralized way around the country," said Pivi Scamperle of agri.capital, the company that runs Germany's largest existing EU €10 million biogas plant, feeding 6 million m³ of biomethane into the national grid.

The boom in biogas comes thanks to a key technological breakthrough a year ago that allowed biogas to be injected into the natural gas grid and so transported around Germany economically, said Thomas Wilkens of WELtec BioPower, a company that manufactures biogas units.

Until that breakthrough, as much as two-thirds of all the energy produced by combined heat and power biogas plants couldn't be used because there was not enough demand for heat at the point of generation — usually in agricultural areas — and there was no technology available either to put the gas into a pipeline and bring it to customers in other places.

"Biogas from Konnern will go all around Germany through the national grid," Wilkens said. "There is a growing demand for plants like this because energy providers are eager to find a way of reducing Germany's dependence on expensive gas from Russia. Biogas could make a big contribution to energy self-sufficiency as well as to fighting global warming."

However, he said that the new technology was just one piece of the puzzle. The biogas plants also have to be located in areas where there are big enough farms to guarantee the raw materials needed to keep the plants running.

Thirty farmers in the vicinity of Konnern will deliver 120,000 tonnes of raw materials each year, mainly corn crops. The eight fermenting tanks are expected to produce 30 million m³ of biogas per year, which will be processed into 15 million m³ of biomethane.

"The biogas won't be burned to produce electricity but will be put instead through a special process of chemical washing without pressure so that it ends up having the same composition as natural gas and so can be injected into the same pipelines as carry the natural gas," Wilkens told RenewableEnergyWorld.com.

Biogas contains about 60 percent methane and 40 percent carbon dioxide while natural gas contains about 97 percent methane. The technology at Konnern involves filtering out the carbon dioxide to increase the proportion of methane in the biogas. At the end of the process, the biogas is 99 percent biomethane.

WELtec BioPower, which has 55 employees, has built about 200 biogas plants around the world, with 150 of these in Germany and the company expects many more orders over and above Konnern as the sector takes off again following some industry setbacks.

Andrea Horbelt said the new grid technology and new tariffs would lead to expansion in the biogas sector after a severe slump last year caused by the doubling in the price of corn and wheat in the past 16 months.

"Germany's four big energy providers have recognized the value of biogas and we think there will be a bright future for large-scale biogas plants that feed gas into the national grid," Horbelt said.

Small-scale biogas plants that use liquid manure as a raw material have also been given a boost by a revised renewable energy law that cleared its last parliamentary hurdle on July 4, 2008. Biogas plants of 150 KW that use liquid manure will get EU €0.04 per kilowatt-hour (kWh), making them more attractive. By setting a generous tariff for manure, the government is hoping to encourage the biogas industry to switch away from corn and wheat amid concerns of rising food prices.

"Research is just beginning to look at the many types of plants that could be used to produce biogas," said Horbelt. "We are confident there will be many alternatives to using crops such as corn."

With the price of natural gas in Europe set to double in the next year according to some economists, Europeans will be hoping the biogas boom lasts.

The Konnern biogas plant is almost as big as the Huckabay Ridge Renewable Natural Gas facility in Stephenville, Texas, where 635,000 MMBtu of biomethane generated from cow manure and other organic waste has been injected into the Enterprise natural gas pipeline since January 2008, making it the world's biggest.

Jane Burgermeiser is a writer based in Austria.

Germany's four big energy providers have recognized the value of biogas and we think there will be a bright future for large-scale biogas plants that feed gas into the national grid." -- Andrea Horbelt, German Biogas Association

21 Comments

Register To Comment
Jerry McCabe
Jerry McCabe
June 16, 2010
Viaspace.com has the answer with its GKC (Giant King Grass) They Just partnered up with a Biogas producer in Germany and it slowly spreading around the world Go check it out.
VIASPACE SIGNS AGREEMENT WITH GERMAN BIOGAS PRODUCER RUBA ENERGIE GMBH
06/14/2010

Giant King grass growing in Europe for the first time
Tania Levy
Tania Levy
July 21, 2008
Hello all.. No No DON'T USE NEW FOOD! It is a much more efficient system to COLLECT AND USE POST CONSUMER FOOD SCRAPS!!!!!! There is so much waste that will produce great methane, plus great compost to go back to the farms and improve food security.

In the San Francisco Bay Area all our haulers collect food scraps & food contaminated papers from restaurants and commercial kitchens (about 75% of their discards), giving them a discount from their refuse fees. Also, residents can put the same food scraps in their green carts for weekly collection of their garden trimmings. Our participation is high.

This is fabulous material to anaerobically digest to capture methane. The solid residue is excellent COMPOST that goes to FARMERS, where it replaces lost carbon, sequesters carbon in soil, improves water retention, reduce need for ghg producing fossil-fuel derived fertilizer

If instead this material goes into landfill, it generates methane into the air - usually before the capture equipment is installed.

This system reduces greenhouse gas emissions at every point, while producing energy, product (compost), and food security.

Using urban source-separated feedstock, you can locate the anaerobic digester in the urban area, and produce the gas for urban use (also to fuel city cng vehicles.)

In California we're working on siting anaerobic digesters for this material0. Currently most of us haul the organics to rural areas for aerobic composting. (also good, but no energy capture). The straight garden trimmings, and possibly the residue from anaerobic, will continue to go there.

Isn't germany already doing wet/dry refuse collection? What's happening to the wet stream now?

For more information on food scrap collection, go to www.stopwaste.org.
Tania Levy
Recycling program manager
City of Berkeley
Dhruba Thapa
Dhruba Thapa
July 20, 2008
Biogas for Clean Environment
Now a days, city garbage with decomposable and non-decomposable materials is a big problem. Similarly, production of methane gas from the agricultural fields is also another problem to all environment concerning people. Agricultural processing plants are producing by-products which is polluting not only fields but also running water (rivers, lakes etc). I am very much interested to know about the utilization of olive by-products after olive extraction on production of methane gas and supply to those who need fuels to cook food. I hope your suggestions for my future industry in Nepal.
Thank you.
Regards,
alok misra
alok misra
July 20, 2008
All thing said and done I find that the user is not educated enough to make use of these technologies. Is bio digestor as easiliy available as a diesel engine?
Is it is as easily operable?
Then again how he is supposed to know that his machines are operating effectively?Are there instruments to check for it available on site?
Technologies and methodologies which can be translated in an easy manner to the user, needs to be evolved . The technology must come out of the labs irrespective of furthur development on the way. Energy crisis is for the real.
Even if it is little improvement , it can be used and development can continue
Javier Carvajal
Javier Carvajal
July 20, 2008
Excellent news and hopefully we soon adopt these technologies in Ecuador that is a rich country in biomass production and has huge advantages for its weather and average temperatures.
Fermentation processes in tropical countries are more robust not only for its weather, but also for complex microflora consorces involved in.
We would like to contact experienced personnel and/or companies interested in investments in Ecuador to produce biogas from agricultural waste materials.
If someone is looking forward investments, please write to ejcarvajal@puce.edu.ec.
Thanks,
Javier Carvajal
Alex Marshall
Alex Marshall
July 18, 2008
Biogas production is far more flexible than simply energy crops. Biogas can be upgraded from mixed municipal waste feedstocks, food wastes, sewage sludge and landfill gas. In the UK were are also getting a increasing focus on the potential biogas can have to be fed in to the National Grid. There are a number of technical and logistical issues to be resolved first, and also to create a level playing field in so far as green energy tarrifs for upgraded biogas are concerned.
Michael May
Michael May
July 18, 2008
Brandon,

I finally saw the calculations on what it would take for algaculture to produce biofuel and I don't think you'll be seeing anything other than demonstration projects in that field ever. The CO2 from this process can go back into the wild since that's where it all came from.

There isn't any way to sequester this CO2, since that costs a significant amount of energy and the process of AD is already at a disadvantage compared to fossil fuels.
V G SHENOI
V G SHENOI
July 18, 2008
Food waste from households and food processing and catering industries can provide substantial inputs to biogas plants. With increasing cost of waste disposal, this is the way to go.
Ruzena Svedelius, AgrD
Ruzena Svedelius, AgrD
July 18, 2008
All renewable organic materials (ROM) contain bioenergy/biofuel and elements (plant nutrients and other elements) and can be used as a feedstock for biogas.
We need novel systems and methods for production of biogas and biofertilisers. High solids anaerobic digestion (HSAD) should be improved. Dry and carbon-rich ROM have to be processed together with wet and nitrogen-rich ROM. Future HSAD should be seen as feed processing equipment used to create the best conditions for methanogenic microorganisms that produce methane by the fermentation. Today we do not have first-class recipes neither advanced technology adjusted to biotransformation of ROM by microorganisms.
Closed local facilities with modern design, logistic, robotics, automation and IT are necessery for management of ROM from household and industrial waste, human and animal excreta, residues from forestry, agriculture, horticulture, all green areas as well as from floods, lakes and seas.
My research was focused on plant nutrients recycling and improvement of soil fertility. Unfortunately, it is impossible to efficiently recycle plant nutrients without drawing attention to bioenergy. We need to realise that bioenergy and element in ROM are both key subjects for our survival. We use ROM for food, feed, fibre and fuel (as methane in biogas). Biogas is generally considered to be carbon neutral.
We have to phase out unsustainable technologies as incineration of ROM and sewage systems. Emissions from these technologies are expensive and polluting losses of energy and elements.
Albert Einstein: "We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them."
mark windsor
mark windsor
July 18, 2008
I read a report today about a fermentation process for turning wood-based syngas into ethanol. It does look really cost-effective and would be great for keeping our existing cars on the road. However...
New Zealand had an enviable programme for converting cars to dual-fuel and still have all the pipelines in place - although government policy changes meant we stopped the incentives too early and all the natural gas compressors and dual-fuelled cars are now gone. Anyway, this article made me think that we might be better piping gas around the North Island of NZ, than building a huge plant to convert this gas into a liquid fuel. I'm sure the investors will want the option to export, so liquid fuels are the only way to go.

Also, for the record - I reckon a mag like REW should know that the unit "kW/h" makes no sense at all and that the "k" in kW should always be small case. Small thing? Maybe.
Benjamin Caire
Benjamin Caire
July 18, 2008
What is the time unit for the rated capacity? If that is on a yearly basis, then I believe there are other facilities that have a greater output.
EUGENE Lucas
EUGENE Lucas
July 18, 2008
Not to worry about the carbon dioxide from biogas - just use it as food for algae in a bioreactor. Then take the algae resdue and feed it back into the biomass process to make more methane. It's a low loss system.
SRINIVAS KASULLA
SRINIVAS KASULLA
July 18, 2008
Great Work,
What will be the scale of the Digester and is there only one digester or several>?
I do feel that instead of going for one big scale digester, we should OPT for some small scale digesters too so that according to me in BIOLOGICAL DIGESTIONS - LARGER THE SCALE BIGGER THE RISKS INVOLVED so why to take risk at this stage where Biogas plants have come a reall long way frm Gobar gas plants.
But then too taking risks is again a great job, unless some one tries nobody will come to know the right scale so all the best and will be looking forward for the plant efficiency and economics.
If anyone can post me then i would be thanfull to them.
srinivaskasulla@gmail.com
william hughes
william hughes
July 18, 2008
A great thing about this process is that the residue has everything in it that it had originally except for some H and C. The residue is a great fertilizer and can be put right back on the fields it came from, reducing the need for fertilizer produced with fossil fuel energy. Even better, the proportion of the elements in the residue is pretty close to what is required by many plants. The plant-animal cycle has already seen to that.
Out of curiosity, does anyone know what process is actually being used to scrub out the CO2.
Incidentally, some ancient work has shown that if water hyacinths which have been used to scrub out a range of elements from the outflow of certain factories are used to produce biogass, for some reason, the proportion of methane in the biogas is much higher.
Marston Schultz
Marston Schultz
July 18, 2008
Biogas IS the better biofuel. Biogas can be made from organic waste, cow manure, human manure, yard cuttings, kitchen waste, fire suppression cuttings. The bi-product after the methane is captured is non petroleum base fertilizer that can be utilized in agriculture. You do not need fresh food crops, when you can use virtually any organic waste source, Use the corn stock not the corn. Since Americans are the most wasteful people on the planet, that shouldn't be a problem. If we ever do run out of waste, there is a special non edible maize developed by the French that is very effective as another feed source.

Capturing biogas will reduce the GHG, (methane) from entering the atmosphere as it does now from landfill. There is a cattle rancher who had a 2000 ton pile of manure that caught fire and burned for two years. That pile could have been turned into methane and fertilizer and the rancher could have made a profit selling methane to the local gas company and selling the fertilizer to local farmers.

Processing organic waste for biogas will reduce the landfill problem by 50%. Sewage plants can produce Biogas like they do in Sweden, which runs a train on biogas.

Running our vehicles on biomethane is sustainable. Anaerobic digestion of all our organic waste is the way to go. keep natural gas as backup.

Forget biodiesel (Cold weather problems, only works with diesel vehicles), Forget ethanol (potential conflict with food crops) Biomethane burns cleaner. Being a gas it will never spill into the ocean or any where else to contaminate the environment. The natural gas grid already exists and can be easily expanded. No more fuel trucks running the road, Wherever the grid runs a fueling station can be installed. And you can fuel up at home with an fueling appliance call PHILL

I'm considering trading in my Prius for a cleaner, greener, Honda GX running on CNG.
Charles Leavitt
Charles Leavitt
July 17, 2008
In agreement with Robert's comment. Although I agree with biogass from agricultural residues, only following an original intention to produce food, I don't agree with intensive growth of crops specifically for biogass, or biofuel production for that matter. When considering population growing as it is, some nations may be better fixed trying to produce more food internally rather than importing, which has a heavy reliance on fuel.
Steven Mielke
Steven Mielke
July 17, 2008
I wonder what the possibilities are for sequestering the CO2 that is filtered out of the biogas. Usually the collection step is the hard part in CO2 sequestration but here that is already solved. If they can find a place to stick the stuff this would turn the technology from carbon neutral to carbon negative....
Jane Burgermeister
Jane Burgermeister
July 17, 2008
Hi Robert and Charles,

Andrea Horbelt said there is a big push in Germany right now to find alternatives to food crops for biogas plants, including grass, straw, manure...

She believd there are plenty of other options to using food crops in the long-term. The new government tariffs are also steering biogas away from food crops.

Jane
Brandon D Hunt
Brandon D Hunt
July 17, 2008
I have read where some communities are sequestering the CO2 from biogas by growing algae to scrub CO2 out of the mixture, then are using the algae to make biofuels such as biodiesel. Insofar as crops, I think only non-food portions of these crops, e.g. wheat chaff or corn stover should be used. Cow manure and hog operations would be a good source of biogas. I understand that Europe and Asia have invested in methane-powered vehicles a lot more than the US. I don't agree with T. Boone Pickens on lots of things, but he may have a point about natural gas powered vehicles. I think biogas and algae may offer the best hope for using biomass energy. I am unsure about ethanol and have even bigger doubts about methanol.
Teddy Raggo
Teddy Raggo
July 17, 2008
I think that this is a great thing. There are so many alternatives to oil and I hope this continues. I think however that non food bio mass needs to be used. I do agree with Mr. Hunt that Algae biomas is a great idea. I am also behind the increased use of Wind, Wave, Geothermal and nuke plants. Go Germany. Lets get this monkey off our backs!!!!!
Paul Schechter
Paul Schechter
July 17, 2008
Anything that is compostable can be used as a feedstock for biogas. Therefore, the obvious answer to the feedstock problem is to use organic material diverted from our waste stream. This kills three birds with one stone: a). Less material going to landfill; b). Less methane production in landfills; c). free energy source for biogas production. Interestingly enough, manure is not an ideal feedstock (too much nitrogen); the ideal feedstock has a carbon to nitrogen ratio of 30:1. If you want to see how different material combinations will affect methane outputs, check out the Anaerobic Digestor Calculator located here: http://biorealis.com/wwwroot/digester_revised.html .

So where could one find a bunch of carbon-heavy, organic feedstock? Hmmm...how about suburban American? With our sprawling lawns and fastidious homeowners...we produce a heck of a lot of organic material (grass clippings, etc) that just goes to waste. My hometown of Madison, WI, for example, has to pay to truck this waste to 3 big composting sites outside of town...why not just use this as an energy source right in town?

I've written a complete business plan for a green restaurant chain that powers its stoves and heats its premise with biogas produced from kitchen waste and lawn waste from the surrounding neighborhood. The scrubbed C02 goes back into an onsite greenhouse, to boost fruits/vegetable growth, which is then used in the restaurant. If you'd like to see the business plan or get involved, just drop me an email: paulschechter@yahoo.com

Add Your Comments

To add your comments you must sign-in or create a free account.

  • Create an Account!
  • Sign-In
Stay Connected
         
To register for our free e-Newsletters, create your free account here:

Editors' Picks

  • Residential Demand Spurs US Solar Installations in 1Q13 Residential Demand Spurs US Solar Installations in 1Q13
  • Ocean Energy Development: Apply Common Sense to Common Problems Ocean Energy Development: Apply Common Sense to Common Problems
  • Severn Barrage “No Knight in Shining Armour for UK Renewables” Severn Barrage “No Knight in Shining Armour for UK Renewables”
  • Project Permit: Cutting Red Tape for Green Energy Project Permit: Cutting Red Tape for Green Energy
  • Solar CHP Innovations Offer Efficiency Kick, Future Energy Storage Options Solar CHP Innovations Offer Efficiency Kick, Future Energy Storage Options

Most Commented

  • 9
    Country-Based Action to Achieve Universal Access to Energy
  • 4
    From the Sea to the Pump: Is Kelp a Viable Biofuel?
  • 3
    Renewable Energy in Myanmar: Not Just Clean, It’s Necessary
  • 2
    Sir Richard Branson unleashes Plan B for the planet

Total Access Partners

Growing Your Business? Learn More about Total Access
  • The Stella Group, Ltd.
  • Rotork plc
  • Green Power Conferences
  • Renewable Energy World Europe
  • RenewableEnergyWorld.com
  • American Council On Renewable Energy (ACORE)
  • RussTech Language Services, Inc.
  • Renewable Energy World Magazine
  • Renewable Energy
  • Solar Energy
  • Wind Energy
  • Bioenergy
  • Geothermal Energy
  • Hydro Power
  • Blogs
  • Video
  • Finance
Resources
  • Companies
  • Products
  • Careers
  • Events
  • Webcasts
  • White Papers
  • Magazines
  • Press Releases
  • e-Newsletters
Company
  • About Us
  • Our Team
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising & Services
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Site Map
Network Partners - Magazines
  • Hydro Review Magazine
  • Hydro Review Worldwide Magazine
  • Renewable Energy World Magazine
Network Partners - Events
  • Power-Gen International
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo North America
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Europe
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Asia
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Africa
  • Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo India
  • HydroVision International
  • HydroVision Brazil
  • HydroVision India
  • HydroVision Russia
© Copyright 1999-2013 RenewableEnergyWorld.com - All rights reserved.
RenewableEnergyWorld.com - World's #1 Renewable Energy Network for news & Information