anaerobic digestion

The production of renewable natural gas from anaerobic digestion presents a win-win scenario: diverting organic waste from landfills while producing a lower-carbon alternative to conventional natural gas that can be injected into existing pipelines and used as vehicle fuel. This post provides an overview of renewable natural gas from anaerobic digestion and its benefits.

How renewable natural gas is produced by anaerobic digestion

The 2018 Anaerobic Digestion Evaluation Study, prepared by the Great Plains Institute for the Partnership on Waste and Energy, defined anaerobic digestion as a process by which bacteria breaks down organic waste into biogas and digestate in a controlled, oxygen-free environment. Biogas, the primary output of this process, can be combusted on-site for heat or electricity, or it can be upgraded to renewable natural gas, an alternative to conventional natural gas, for use in natural gas vehicles and combined heat and power systems. Digestate is an organic residue that can be used as soil fertilizer.

Anaerobic digestion, an organic waste management strategy used widely in Europe and North America, can use a variety of feedstocks, including municipal solid waste, food waste, yard waste, and even wastewater sludge. Countries around the world use this waste management strategy to divert organic waste from landfills and use it to produce energy.

What are the uses and benefits of renewable natural gas from anaerobic digestion?

When organic waste, such as food and yard waste, is disposed of in a landfill, it decomposes, releasing methane and carbon dioxide in an uncontrolled environment. Methane and carbon dioxide are greenhouse gases that are harmful to the environment when released into the atmosphere but could be harnessed by processes like anaerobic digestion and made useful. Additionally, landfilling contributes to soil and water pollution and takes up land that could be put to other uses.

Renewable natural gas is a lower-carbon alternative that is interchangeable with conventional natural gas. As such, it can be injected into existing natural gas infrastructure and used as vehicle fuel in natural gas vehicles that run on compressed natural gas or liquefied natural gas.

Natural gas-powered vehicles, whether powered by conventional natural gas or renewable natural gas, can be passenger cars, as well as medium- and heavy-duty vehicles like trucks. Considering that the transportation sector is a high emitter of greenhouse gases and that heavy-duty transportation vehicles like long-haul trucks are difficult to electrify, renewable natural gas-powered vehicles could help reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the transportation sector.

In addition to use in the transportation sector in the form of renewable natural gas, biogas can be used in combined heat and power (CHP) systems in residential and commercial buildings. CHP, which is used in 4,400 facilities across the US, is an energy efficient way to produce electricity and heat that could be made more energy efficient through the use of biogas-powered CHP engines, such as those distributed by Clarke Energy.

Despite the potential that anaerobic digestion and renewable natural gas have in reducing landfilling and greenhouse gas emissions, both continue to face challenges that inhibit their expansion in the United States. Why is that? Stay tuned as we interview some subject matter experts to find out why.

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