Louise Downing, Bloomberg
January 18, 2013
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6 Comments
Biogen Ltd., a U.K. developer of plants that generate electricity from food waste, plans to start building four to five facilities this year as rising landfill taxes increases the costs of burying waste underground.
The company already has the funding in place to build the projects, Richard Barker, chief executive officer of Bedfordshire-based Biogen, said today by e-mail. It plans to raise about 30 million pounds ($48 million) to implement projects through 2014 and beyond, he said, and some of this funding is already in place.
Supermarkets and businesses are being encouraged to send their food waste to anaerobic digestion facilities such as those offered by Biogen by a landfill tax that makes it increasingly expensive to bury waste. It was introduced in April at 64 pounds a ton and is set to increase by 8 pounds a year. The tax will help drive expansion of the U.K.’s waste-to-energy industry, Barker said.
Biogen plans in March to start building a 2.5-megawatt project in Hertfordshire that will generate enough electricity for about 4,000 homes. It also plans to start work on a plant in Denbighshire and is the preferred bidder for a plant in South Wales. Biogen is already building a facility in North Wales. By 2014 its total food waste processing capacity will have doubled to about 200,000 tons-a-year, the CEO said.
The U.K.’s Department of Energy and Climate Change estimates bioenergy plants using wood chip and food and agricultural waste to produce heat and power may meet 8 percent to 11 percent of the country’s primary energy demand within eight years.
Increased Competition
Interest in Biogen’s facilities comes from across the whole food waste supply chain, from manufacturers through to supermarkets and the hospitality industry, said Barker. This year will probably see increased competition from new companies and merger and acquisition opportunities, he said. Biogen will focus on the U.K. market.
Kier Group Plc, a U.K. construction company, in August bought half of Biogen for 24.4 million pounds. Biogen remains “open minded” about taking on new strategic investors in the future, Barker said. It’s already in discussions with potential partners for future projects.
Copyright 2013 Bloomberg
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April 26, 2013
I surely wish you all the best in your studies.
My interest is not totally academic though it would have been better for me had it been. A very hot bioreactor from a university in Utah cost me a bundle. It was an experience that I would prefer not to relive. An absurdly incompetent licensee might well have caused its own incredible problems. The biogas was even cleaned, sanitized and partially dehydrated to become an equivalent to natural gas but at some considerable trouble and expense.
Few know about nutrient trading credits that have been provided by U.S. states to clean up rivers, lake and offshore ocean locations by some states. If nutrients can be removed from the effluent of livestock farms, there will not be the principal cause of algal blooms. The nutrients themselves can even be recycled as fertilizer or sold on the open market.
The following is a white paper that concentrates only on recycling nitrogen in a project that may be ongoing:
http://www.bionpa.com/docs/Nutrient%20Trading%20&%20Cost%20Containment-Sept%202010.pdf
I cannot verify the claims for greatly superior efficiency in extracting methane as a byproduct but there are numerous academic research projects that detail same.
I think your link may be outdated as to claims for excessive cost of biogas for microturbine fuel but again I only know of claims to the contrary. Exaggerated claims for hydrogen fuel cells, however, were an expensive bust for Iceland over many years despite all the hype. I would guess it would be no different with biogas.
Best, Terry