作者zmcse (bon ami)
看板EngTalk
标题Converting trash gas into energy gold
时间Fri May 26 00:21:49 2006
Converting trash gas into energy gold
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/TECH/05/25/landfill.gas/index.html
ATLANTA,
Georgia (CNN) -- The
Trash you toss in the garbage could
end up powering your lights, computer and washing machine, because
in the world of alternative
energy, one man's
Trash is another
man's treasure trove of fuel.
With the growing concern for U.S. dependence on foreign oil and
recognition of shrinking
fossil fuel reserves, new attention is
being focused on renewable sources of
energy.
One such source that already is being converted to electricity is
landfill
gas.
According to the
Environmental Protection Agency, every person in
America produces an average of 4.5 pounds of garbage per day. Much
of that
Trash goes into landfills, which are the largest
human-related source of methane in the United States.
In 1994, the
EPA formed the Landfill Methane Outreach Program
(LMOP) under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change. LMOP Team Leader Brian Guzzone said since methane is both
a pollutant greenhouse
gas and a source of
energy, it offers a
good opportunity to reduce greenhouse emissions and provide
energy.
About 50 percent of all of the waste that we generate as a society
today is put into municipal solid waste landfills, Guzzone said.
The
EPA encourages the capture of the resulting landfill
gas and
the
energy produced from it.
The federal government has partnerships with more than 500
utilities, states, private businesses and communities. "The
EPA's
role is to work with communities that have landfills and help them
realize the potential opportunity of their landfill," Guzzone
said. That includes providing materials, technical services and
community outreach.
Trash into
gas
The process of converting landfill
gas into
energy is relatively
simple. A series of wells sunk into a landfill collect the
gas,
which is then used to burn in engines and boilers, heat
greenhouses, fuel vehicles, etc. Guzzone said landfill
gas can be
used just as traditional fuels such as coal and natural
gas are
used. "It's comparable to natural
gas," he said.
In 2005, there were 396 operational landfill
gas projects in the
United States, Guzzone said. According to the
EPA Web site,
two-thirds of the current projects are being used to generate
electricity, producing approximately nine billion kilowatt-hours
per year.
The other third of operational projects supply
gas for direct-use
applications, such as fueling boilers, engines and greenhouses.
In total, the projects produce the
energy equivalent of
electricity for 725,000 homes or heat for 1.2 million homes.
One of LMOP's partners is textile manufacturer Interface Flooring
Systems.
Located in LaGrange,
Georgia, the company buys landfill
gas from
the city-owned landfill. The
gas is sucked from the 90-acre
landfill by 53 pipes, compressed and piped 10 miles to the carpet
production plant where it is used as fuel.
David
Gustashaw, Interface's vice president of engineering,
stumbled upon the project while trying to find cost-efficient
sustainable
energy. "I got tired of hearing what were considered
to be green renewable opportunities always costing more," he said.
After
Gustashaw ruled out other alternative
energy sources for
practical reasons, the only option left on his list was landfill
gas.
It turned out that landfill
gas was the perfect fuel for his new
production plant, which started operating last year.
Gustashaw's goal in approaching the project was to ensure true
sustainability in its environmental, social and financial impacts.
By converting air waste into
energy, Interface has reduced its
dependence on natural
gas by 20 percent and reduced greenhouse
emissions from the landfill,
Gustashaw said.
Socially, "the city is generating a revenue stream from something
they were throwing away," said
Gustashaw. "So now the city has
more money for services for the residents."
On the financial side, the initial financial outlay for new
equipment for the project was in the $2.5 to $3 million range.
Gustashaw said that both Interface and the city will be able to
recover the investment. The company expects to recoup its capital
in two to three years, the city in four to five years, he said.
Gustashaw believes that his project pioneered the way for
smaller-scale projects. On a much larger scale, Guzzone said that
the fastest-growing segment interested in landfill methane is the
corporate community of heavy
fossil fuel users of natural
gas.
But it's not a panacea for the nation's
energy challenges. Both
Gustashaw and Guzzone said that landfill
gas projects are
site-specific. Depending on the size and
energy needs of the
project, landfill
gas may or may not be the best and most
cost-effective alternative
energy.
Nor is landfill
gas expected to replace foreign oil. Because
landfill
gas is so site sensitive,
Gustashaw said the best
approach to offsetting our dependence on foreign
fossil fuels
involves a combination of alternative
energy sources, including
solar, wind, water, and geothermal power, as well as landfill
gas,
according to which resource best fits the particular situation.
One disadvantage to landfill
gas is that though it's cheaper than
natural
gas, it has less than about half the heating capacity.
However, neither Guzzone nor
Gustashaw acknowledge any downsides
to landfill
gas energy when used in conditions that make it a good
option.
"You're taking what was a liability and turning it into an asset,"
Guzzone said.
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