Biogas Plant Energy in Village Hurhure | Video

Biogas Plant Energy in Village Hurhure | Video



This video shows how small scale integrated energy systems helps the community of Hurhuredanda Village in Nawalparasi District gain access to modern form of energy for cooking, charging LED lamps & mobile phones. The footage for this video was taken by Mani Karmacharya staff of Practical Action and is narrated by Shradha Giri staff of Practical Action

Cuban Province Boosts the use of Biogas

 Cuban Province Boosts the use of Biogas
 Cuban Province Boosts the use of Biogas


The Cuban province of Holguin is prioritizing the use biogas as a renewable source of energy. The province currently has 13 plants with anaerobic technology for the treatment of organic wastes aimed at producing biogas.

Engineer Alexander Leyva Valdespino, head of the Renewable Energy Source Department at the provincial branch of the Cuban Electricity Company in Holguin, told the AIN news agency that four other units will soon be completed in this northeastern jurisdiction.

According to Leyva Valdespino they plan to build at least 19 biogas production facilities this year, and may build as many as 21, some of which are located in the agricultural area of Aguas Claras, in the municipality of Holguin.

Biogas production in the province of Holguin is given top priority as a renewable source of energy together with hydroelectric energy and wind farms.

Investments in Holguin aimed at reducing environment contamination continue to grow along with the food production sector.

Hector Lugo, the director of the Electricity Company in Holguin, said they are studying the use of other sources of clean energy such as wind farms in the municipality of Gibara where plans in this coastal city are to exploit the favorable wind conditions by building additional wind farms, and the possible construction of two additional small hydroelectric plants in other areas

making Plastic bag biogas Part 1 to 2 Video

making Plastic bag biogas Part 1



making Plastic bag biogas Part 2

APAO-Biogas in Ontario Video

APAO-Biogas in Ontario Video

Bio Power Systems Ltd

Peter Gichohi has been working with the Energy sector for the last 20years.
He is currently working to produce power through generators powered by bio gas.
Mang'u High school is a living example of his work on the ground.

How human waste could power Nigeria's slums

How human waste could power Nigeria's slums

(CNN) -- In the crowded slums of Lagos, Nigeria, untreated sewage mingles with the chaotic network of pipes that deliver water to the city. Those who can't afford a local borehole or a private vendor know better than to take their chances with the taps -- most preferring to go thirsty instead.
That's according to Olatunbosun Obayomi, a Lagosian microbiologist and inventor who has lived in the city all his life.
But now Obayomi thinks he's found a solution -- one that not only tackles the slums' sanitation issues, but creates free, clean energy in the process.
"With a cheap retrofit, household septic tanks -- the source of the sewage -- can be converted into biogas generators," said Obayomi, 29, whose concept has earned him a TED fellowship, a Nigerian Youth Leadership Award and growing international acclaim.
"The idea of turning waste into energy has been around for centuries. My innovation is simply applying the chemistry in a practical way by using the resources we already have," he explained.
In most homes in Lagos, toilet waste is stored in rudimentary septic tanks beneath the ground. Here it decomposes into a poisonous compound, before being sucked out by a tanker that deposits it all in a nearby lagoon.
"Unfortunately, the system of water pipes is very disorganized, and they often pass through the same place where the sewage is dumped," said Obayomi. "And it's not uncommon for poorly constructed septic tanks to leak directly into the drainage system."

Conventional septic tank  Conventional septic tank
But rather than attempt a wholesale overhaul of Nigeria's waste system, Obayomi's approach makes use of the existing septic tanks -- equipping them with new waste entry pipes that remove oxygen from the decaying process.

Retrofitted septic tank  Retrofitted septic tank
As he explained: "When excreta decompose with oxygen, it creates a useless, incombustible mixture that carries disease. But without oxygen, the germs die and the mixture produces a combustible gas."
This biogas -- a mix of carbon dioxide and methane -- can be stored in an adjacent underground chamber and used to power cooking stoves, heat homes or even generate electricity.
Opinion: Tackling climate change still a luxury in developing world
"Converting waste into biogas is a win-win strategy," said Sarah Butler-Sloss, founding director of the Ashden Awards, an organization that champions local energy innovations around the world.
"What makes it so elegant is that it resolves a life-threatening sanitation issue -- by treating harmful, waterborne germs -- while simultaneously creating a much-needed source of carbon-free energy," she said.
Butler-Sloss added that recent figures from the U.N. say 1.4 billion people worldwide have no access to electricity, while 2.7 billion still prepare food on grossly inefficient and carbon-hungry open fires.
"We have seen similar projects in places like India and China -- where everything from domestic garbage to animal waste has been used to produce energy with great success ... Clearly this is the time to embrace domestically produced biogas, especially in the developing world."
It's a view shared by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP).
Patrick Mwefigye is program officer for sustainable consumption and production at UNEP's regional office for Africa. He says that in areas where there is "little funding, capacity or infrastructure" for complex waste management, "we see the production of biogas as having great potential."
At present, Mwefigye says the gas is regularly produced in just a handful of African nations.
"In Rwanda, for instance, the prisons have been fitted with large biogas generators, so that they are almost entirely self-powering," he said.
But, although Obayomi's retrofitted biogas generator is relatively cheap to build -- requiring only low-tech materials such as plastic pipes, cement and sand -- and despite all the recognition it's attracted, only a prototype has been installed so far.
Yet Obayomi conservatively estimates that the average street in Lagos could produce 1,720 liters of biogas a day -- enough for an engine-powered water pump to serve the daily domestic needs of at least 50 families.
So what's the hold-up?
"Biogas generators tend to be constructed in situ," said Butler-Sloss, "And while the materials are relatively cheap, they're not mass-produced like solar panels or wind-turbines so, at present, it's difficult to scale-up."
Obayomi has a different take, however. For him, it's not an issue of resources or need, but attitude.
"Although I've been filmed by government TV and won these awards, no politician has approached me to build anything. In Nigeria there is a lot of talk but very little walk," he lamented.
There is also a problem of credibility, he said. In Obayomi's experience, the hardest place to be taken seriously as a Nigerian inventor is in Nigeria itself.
"It is a new concept for many Nigerians," he said. "There's still this feeling that unless an idea or a piece of new technology comes from the West, then it's not glamorous ... it's not valid."

Source:http://edition.cnn.com/2011/09/26/world/africa/nigeria-sewage-biogas/index.html

Biogas Plant in Faisalabad video

Biogas Plant in Faisalabad Gas Solution by rural support program

Senegal/Burkina Faso: Banking on biogas (IPS)

The dusty barrels standing outside family compounds in the Léona neighbourhood of Kaolack, Senegal are signs of the growing popularity of biogas as a source of energy. For the past two months, Amadou Faye and his household of 25 have relied exclusively on biogas energy produced from livestock waste.

Mr. Faye’s family raises cows, goats and sheep and grows groundnuts. They are early adopters of biogas. Mr. Faye says, “To spend 300,000 CFA francs [over 600 US dollars] … to install biogas is difficult. But I think it’s important. Since we started using this energy, I haven’t had problems with electricity cuts.”

Nearly every West African country is wrestling with frequent power cuts. In Senegal, cuts have led to public demonstrations against the national electric company, which is struggling to keep up with demand. Firewood and charcoal present environmental and health problems. So Senegal, along with Burkina Faso, has turned to biogas as a partial solution.

Senegal’s National Biogas Program (known as PNB in French) is supporting the construction of thousands of biodigesters by local masons. Biodigesters feature an underground tank and a system of barrels. Owners add cow dung and water to the tank each morning. The gas produced is trapped in barrels and then piped to the household kitchen.

Alassane Dème is secretary general of Senegal’s Ministry for Energy. He explains, “The fermentation of the mixture of dung and other waste will produce, in conditions similar to human digestion, methane gas.” In addition to gas, biodigesters also produce organic fertilizer.

Mr. Dème says that a major obstacle to the program is the high cost of installation. Each biodigester costs between 800 and 920 US dollars, depending on its size. The Senegalese government subsidizes between 35 and 50 per cent of this cost, according to the energy ministry. Eight thousand biodigesters are expected to be built between now and 2013.

Ignace Ouédraogo is head of PNB in Burkina Faso, which has also begun experimenting with biogas. He says the cost of a six cubic metre biodigester varies between 850 and 1100 dollars. This is higher than in Senegal, but here too the government is subsidizing start-up costs.

Mr. Ouédraogo explains, “The government allocated a subsidy of 160,000 CFA (around 340 dollars) per biodigester … the beneficiary contributes up to 190,000 CFA (400 US dollars) in cash.”

Back in Senegal, Mr. Faye notes the practicality of biogas, saying, “We have our own energy source. I can easily find replacement parts when it is damaged, because … the company responsible for the installation provides them to us.” For him, biogas is a good alternative to charcoal, firewood and the unreliable electricity supply.

Farm Radio Weekly

5 gallon mini biogas-generator Construction video part 1 to 3

5 gallon mini biogas-generator part 1



5 gallon mini biogas-generator part 2




5 gallon mini biogas-generator part 3

Focus on biogas plants

To meet the domestic fuel and bio-fertiliser needs, 3,680 biogas plants are planned to be set up in rural areas by June 2012, according to Pakistan Centre for Renewable Technologies.


Over 4,000 biogas plants were installed between 1974 and 1987. But with the withdrawal of official financial support, the pace was slowed down and since then only 6,000 plants were installed till 2006. - File photo


The Centre says that over 2,100 family-size biogas plants — against the target of 2,500 — have already been set up throughout the country.

Over 4,000 biogas plants were installed between 1974 and 1987. But with the withdrawal of official financial support, the pace was slowed down and since then only 6,000 plants were installed till 2006. - File photo

The programme, supported by NGOs, farmers’ bodies and the rural support programme netwok, is being implemented by Pakistan Biogas Development Enterprise.

The construction of 30,000 biogas installations planned for next four years will be funded by the four provinces including Khyber Pakhtunkhwa with an investment of Rs2.7 billion. A sum of Rs244 million will be disbursed as investment rebate support to households.

Often animal waste is usually not used productively. In Landhi alone, a suburb of Karachi city, around 0.35 million cattle heads are kept in a three kilometre area that produces thousands of tons of waste but 80-90 per cent of it is thrown into the sea. A Canadian firm Highmark Renewables and the KESC jointly intend to set up a biogas plant at a cost of around $70 million which would produce 30 megawatts of electricity besides 400 tons of residue bio-fertiliser.

The biogas plants will considerably decrease the domestic fuel cost. Moreover, biogas will contribute towards environment protection, sustenance of ecosystem and conservation of biodiversity.

According to PCRT gas produced in a small bio-digester which contains about 20 kg dung should be enough to meet the fuel needs of a small family. A bio-digester for any number of animals can be designed. However, the plant must be water/gas-tight and enough manure and water should be added to it every day.

Biogas plants are fairly popular worldwide. There are almost two million biogas plants in India and the facilities have been built even in the United Kingdom and the US through official patronage. Around 89 such plants in the US are consuming 13 per cent or 95,000 tons of waste to produce about 25,000 megawatt of electricity that is sufficient for 2.3 million households.’

There is a huge potential for production of biogas in the country. There are currently around 47 million big animals in Pakistan. Even if 50 per cent of their drop is collected, availability of fresh dung comes to 233 million kg a day that can produce around 12 million cubic meters of biogas per day. The fuel requirement of over 20 per cent of the population could be met only from biogas. It will also produce 19 million tons of bio-fertiliser per year.

Around 70 per cent of population in Khyber Pukhtunkhwa lives in rural areas. Most farmers have two or more cattle head whose dung mixed with an equal quantity of water can be used to produce biogas. Any farmer having at least three animals can set up this plant with a one-time investment of Rs40,000 —50,000.

If individual farmers cannot afford the cost, a few families with domestic animals could jointly install such a plant in their neighbourhood. And by selling the gas to families that do not contribute manure for having no animals, the maintenance expenditure, if any, could be financed with this money.

Over 4,000 biogas plants were installed between 1974 and 1987. But with the withdrawal of official financial support, the pace was slowed down and since then only 6,000 plants were installed till 2006. Firewood, dung and crop residues are major sources of energy for rural and low-income urban households. In 1992, firewood provided fuel to about 60 per cent such households followed by dung in dry form at around 18 per cent. To save deforestation, biogas gas is a viable alternative.

Original post by www.dawn.com

The Folkecenter biogas concept.

Farm Biogas Digester

Folkecenter has developed biogas technology since 1984

The Folkecenter biogas concept.

In the field of biogas, we concentrate our work on biogas installations where animal manure is the main source for the process. Up to 5% fat waste is normally co-fermented together with the manure to increase the gas production.
We develop and test suitable biogas technologies for small and medium scale enterprises, and do pilot projects for full-scale biogas production and demonstration plants.
We have done several farm biogas pilot projects in Denmark and our consultancy, technology and know-how have been transferred to several Danish companies. Biogas systems using our technology have been in operation since 1984, and have delivered high yield and performed high reliability. Our biogas digesters have proven there worth worldwide, in as different places a Kaunas, Lithuania and Yubetsu, Japan. Folkecenter has since 1988 been involved in family biogas projects. Through our daughter centre, Mali Folkecenter, Vest Africa, has been installed several family biogas plants with the support of UNDP

Folkecenter offers:

• Consultancy on planning and
   construction of biogas plant
• Technical documentation
   includingdrawings of biogas
   digesters, for production
   under licence.
• Practical training courses on
   how to operate a biogas
   plant.

We can supply documentation and construction drawings for production of 100, 200 and 300 m3 horizontal digesters, and 500 and 1000 m3 vertical digesters.


Folkecenter has published a number of repports on farm biogas digesters.

Folkecenter has developed biogas digesters with the pioneering experts Erwin Köberle, Arthur Wellinger and Ekkehard Schneider
 




The farm biogas digesters are available in two versions: horizontal up to 300 m3 , and vertical from 500 to 1000 m3.

Biogas digesters at Kaunas, Lithuania
 

Technical overview biogas digesters at Kaunas, Lithuania
Source: http://www.folkecenter.net/gb/tech-trans/technologies/farm-biogas/

Introduction, Determining Plant Size, Biogas Plant Construction Manual Fixed-dome Digester

Introduction, Determining Plant Size, Biogas Plant Construction Manual Fixed-dome Digester

Biogas (Gobar) Plant
Biogas (Gobar) Plant

 Table of Contents

1.  Introduction

A biogas plant is an anaerobic digester of organic material for the purposes of treating waste and concurrently generating biogas fuel.  The treated waste is a nutrient-rich, nitrogen-rich fertilizer while the biogas is mostly methane gas with inert gases including carbon dioxide and nitrogen.  Biogas plants are a preferred alternative to burning dried animal dung as a fuel and can be used for the treatment of human waste.  Other feedstock which can be used includes plant material, non-meat or grease food-wastes, and most types of animal dung.  Over a million biogas plants have been constructed in the developing world for treatment of organic wastes, alternative energy supply to direct burning in the home, and overall improvement of human health and the environment.  Many factors for selection of feedstock and site location must be researched before deciding to install a biogas plant.   Successful construction of the biogas plant requires a proper design and adherence to follow correct construction methods.  The success or failure of any biogas plant primarily depends upon the quality of construction work.  The following instructions are based on the step-by-step instructions from the Government of Nepal Biogas Support Program Gobar Gas and Agricultural Equipment Development Company of Nepal has developed the design for model 2047 biogas plant.  This biogas plant model has become prolific across Asia and is known as a fixed-dome plant.  The advantages of the fixed dome plant include the simplicity of design, few moving parts, low cost to construct and low maintenance.  The disadvantages when compared to a floating-dome digester are primarily the inability to store gas for use on demand; gas from the fixed dome digester must be used as generated or expelled to avoid damaging the digester.

2.  Determining Plant Size

This manual includes design and construction material quantities for the Gobar biogas plant models of 4, 6, 8, 10, 15 and 20 cubic meters capacity.  Design and size of a plant other than mentioned above is feasible and a skilled engineer should be consulted for deviations from the provided designs.  The biogas plant size is dependent on the average daily feed stock and
expected hydraulic retention time of the material in the biogas system.  Generally, 24 kilograms of feedstock complimented with 24 liters of water per day with a hydraulic retention time of 35 days will require a 4-cubic meter plant.  Table 2.1 below gives some relevant data about the six different sizes of biogas plants presented in this manual.
biogas table 2.1
biogas table 2.1
The biogas plant detailed in this manual consists of five main structures or components: 1. InletTank; 2. Digester Vessel; 3. Dome; 4. Outlet Chamber; and 5. Compost Pits.  The required quantity of feedstock and water is mixed in the inlet tank and the slurry is discharged to the digester vessel for digestion.  The gas produced through methanogenesis in the digester is collected in the dome.  The digested slurry flows to the outlet tank through the manhole.  The slurry then flows through the overflow opening in the outlet tank to the compost pit.  The gas is supplied from the dome to the point of application through a pipeline.When a biogas plant is underfed the gas production will be low; in this case, the pressure of the gas might not be sufficient to fully displace the slurry in the outlet chamber.  It is important to design the plant keeping hydrostatic pressure higher at the inlet tank than the outlet tank.  The hydrostatic pressure from slurry in the inlet and outlet tanks will pressurize the biogas accumulated in the dome.  If too much material is fed into the digester and the volume of gas is consumed, the slurry may enter the gas pipe and to the appliances.
gobar biogas plant design diagram
gobar biogas plant design diagram
gobar biogas plant design table
gobar biogas plant design table


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Domestic Biogas programmes are implemented by ANERT

This program is aimed to recover energy from waste; scientific disposal of waste; and conversion of waste into fertilizer after energy extraction; to improve sanitation; to protect environment; and also to generate employment opportunities. 


Biogas programmes are implemented by ANERT with financial assistance from MNRE and with active participation of beneficiaries.  ANERT has installed 102 large size biogas plants since its inception with central financial support. An average of 10 lakm m3 bio gas is being generated every year.  These plants are installed at medical colleges, district medical hospitsls, private and charitable institutions with 15 to 70 m3 capacity for thermal applications and electricity generation.

Of the 102 plants, 73 use night soil, 24 use canteen waste and 5 use animal waste as feed material.  5 plants generate electricity, each using a 10 kW dual-fuel engine.  Other plants use biogas for heating applications.

Biogas is an economical, renewable and eco-friendly fuel

September 12 The country’s first 600 cubic metres compressed biogas bottling plant (non-conventional energy source) has been set up at Kala Tibba village near here. Punjab Energy Biogas is an economical, renewable and eco-friendly fuelDevelopment Agency (PEDA) Director Balaur Singh said the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy and PEDA had joined hands to promote eco-friendly gas projects in the state. The plant at Kala Tibba village would produce gas from cattle dung and poultry and kitchen waste.
He said a survey indicated that hundreds of cattle owners in rural areas had been dumping dung on the roadsides, polluting environment and damaging roads.
The government, he said, had decided to offer carbon credit to the green gas plant. The benefit could run into lakhs of rupees annually.
Asserting that biogas would cost less than the LPG, Balaur Singh said the entire quantity of biogas filled in the cylinder would be exhausted whereas liquified gas at the bottom remains unused in the LPG cylinders. The production would help overcome LPG shortage faced by commercial houses. The government had decided to offer 50 per cent subsidy to promote green gas production.
The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy had planned to promote the installation of 15 compressed biogas bottling plants in different states with the capacity of producing 11,200 cubic metres per day.
The states to be covered were Punjab, Haryana, Rajasthan, Gujarat, Karnataka, Bihar, Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra. The ministry had approved another green gas project with a 1000 cubic metres capacity at Nijawat Kokrian village in Muktsar district, which was likely to be completed by year-end.
Punjab Agricultural University has set up a biogas development training centre to impart technical knowledge to the interested entrepreneurs. The bio slurry discharged by the green gas plants could be used as liquid fertiliser to be used for organic farming.
So far only two farmers, Pradeep Dawra of Gidderanwali village and Amar Kumar of Malout, have shown interest in marketing liquid fertiliser, sources said.
Eco-friendly fuel
Biogas is an economical, renewable and eco-friendly fuel. It is produced in an anaerobic digester i.e. a gobar gas plant. Biogas in its natural self consists of moisture, carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulfide and methane. Methane has a high calorific value in its p3ure stage. Due to the presence of impurities, biogas becomes a low calorific value fuel and, hence, has a limited application even though it is cheap and easily available

Source: http://www.punjabstarnews.com/Bathinda/biogas-is-an-economical-renewable-and-eco-friendly-fuel.html

Gobar Biogas Plant Design Diagram Photo

Gobar Biogas Plant Design Diagram
Gobar (Biogas) Biogas Plant Design Diagram

dimensions for various size fron the gobar gas design in figure

Biogas Plant Construction Fixed-dome Digester Photo Gallery

Biogas Plant Construction in Afghanistan, Joint Engineer Directorate Fixed-dome Digester  Photo Gallery
Biogas Plant Construction in Afghanistan, Joint Engineer Directorate Fixed-dome Digester  Photo Gallery

INLET TANK FOR MIXING WATER AND MANURE (GOBAR)

Concrete Foundation for Digester.  Center Guide Pipe and Horizontal Cord.
BIOGAS LANTERN AMD BIOGAS DOUBLE BURNER STOVE



PLANT CONSTRUCTION
Earth Base of Excavation is Compacted BIOGAS PLAN
BIOGAS PLANT






COMPOST PITS WITH BRICK WALLS FOR STABILITY

INLET TANK DURING MASONRY CONSTRUCTION

INLET TANK

SLABS IN PLACE ON OUTLET CHAMBER

MANHOLE INSPECTION OF COMPLETE BIOGAS CHAMBER

OUTLET CHAMBER , FOUNDATION OF BRICK WITH MANHOLE ADJACENT TO DIGESTER

COMPLETE FIXED DOME WITH TURRET

MOULD WITH SAND LAYER BEFORE PLACING CAST

ARCH GUIDE, LOOP AT RIGHT END FOR PIVOT ON VERTICAL CENTRAL PIPE



First Two Courses of Bricks Placed on Top of Foundation.

First Two Courses of Bricks Placed on Top of Foundation.


Cobbles and Gravel Placed on Compacted Earth Floor.

Excavation for Digester.  Mechanical or Manual Excavation is Practical.

Excavation for Digester.  Mechanical or Manual Excavation is Practical.

Scale Model of 4 Cubic-Meter Biogas Plant for Training (Camp Nathan Smith,
Kandahar, Afghanistan)

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