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Bio-Energy and P2 in Cumberland County Virginia

Bio-Energy and P2 in Cumberland County Virginia . Bio-Energy in Cumberland, Virginia. What we are told: We are addicted to oil This situation demands we find alternative energy sources quickly Bio-Energy can help

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Bio-Energy and P2 in Cumberland County Virginia

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  1. Bio-Energy and P2 in Cumberland CountyVirginia

  2. Bio-Energy in Cumberland, Virginia • What we are told: • We are addicted to oil • This situation demands we find alternative energy sources quickly • Bio-Energy can help • Poultry-Cumberland’s largest revenue source creates potential pollution problems • What we know: • Our addiction is based on technology over the past 120 years • Like any addiction it is going to take a great effort by many people to change • People don’t like change unless they see the benefits- first change the way we think • Unified effort- to move past the present patterns of behavior • Think win-win not win-lose • What we don’t know but need to find out- • How do we go about change so it will benefit everyone? • Who are the stakeholders that need to participate to bring about change? • When is the right time to change?

  3. Local Concerns • Soil • Crop profitability –tobacco, peanuts • Poultry competition - limited • Increasing tax burden on the Farmer- 61% revenue from Agriculture, over 80% of that comes from poultry • Land value increasing • Increasing restrictions on land use • Increase in farm regulations- more to come • Pollution Prevention!

  4. Energy resources are available in Cumberland • Animal Waste- Poultry, Cattle, Swine-Large number of Poultry Broiler Houses • Crops- Corn, Soybeans, Switch Grass? • Landfill Gas- • Grants- • Visionary Leadership, Education, Research • Va Tech- Research, Cooperative Extension • Va Dept Agriculture & Consumer Service • Benchmarking with others- WVU project, and other projects discussed today • DMME- Robin Jones

  5. How can we locally utilize Poultry Waste? • Application on land- fertilizer, limits and concerns about run-off into streams • Burning- air pollution • Anaerobic Digestion- let’s look at this option

  6. Crops - Fuel and Food • Soybean oil can go on the grocery shelf or into bio-diesel in your diesel truck or car • Production of Bio-Fuels in 2005 equal nearly 2 per cent of world gasoline use. • From 2000 to 2005, ethanol production nearly tripled, from 4.6 billion 12.2 billion gallons • The trigger in 2000 was the $40/barrel price of oil • Bio-diesel starting from a small base of 251 million gallons in 2000, climbed to an estimated 790 million gallons in 2005

  7. Crops to Energy-Net yield** and gallons/acre • Switch Grass- to Ethanol (x) …. 500-750 gallons/acre • Corn- to Ethanol 1.5 ………….. 300-400 gallons/acre • Sugar Beets* to Ethanol 1.9 ….. 500-714 gallons/acre • Sugar Cane* to Ethanol 8.0 ….. 650-665 gallons/acre • Soybeans to Bio-diesel (3.24) …… 50-60 gallons/acre • *France- Beets, Brazil-Sugar Cane • **Net Yield is the represents the units of product for each unit invested

  8. Grants- • Governments support bio-fuels production because of concerns about climate change and the possible shrinkage of the flow of imported oil • Brazil using sugarcane produces 4 billion barrels a year or 40% of it’s automotive needs as of 2004 • The US using corn produces 3.4 billion barrels or just under 2% of it’s automotive needs as of 2004

  9. Cumberland County Bio-Energy Strategy- 3 key parts • Develop a solution to the Poultry waste problem • Encourage develop of new energy crop (s) with an increasing value tied to escalating energy prices • Review Grant opportunities

  10. We were convinced that a Poultry Digester was the best option • Questions: • Would it work in removing or reducing pollutants? • Is it feasible • What are the considerations and sensitivities • Can we make money?

  11. Public Health and Anaerobic Digestion-Pathogen Removal Dr David Stafford Enviro-Control Ltd

  12. Agricultural Purpose in using Manures for Fertilizers. Maintain organic status of soil, . Sustainable management practices include minimum tillageandOrganic Agriculture.

  13. Impacts of Manure Discharges The most serious impacts are with Slaughterhouse and hog farm discharges. Topography, soil structure and shallow aquifers increases the problem of water quality.

  14. Pathogens Identified Pathogens present in sewage sludges and animal manures are a potential hazard when used as fertilizer or where discharges to water-courses may infect humans and animals. Protozoan parasites (i.e.Giardia, Entamoeba) and bacteria (e.g.Salmonella) are shed by livestock or humans and acquired by humans through reservoir and recreational water.

  15. Pathogens of Concern. The fate and transport of human pathogens from manures will require research followed by development of appropriate methods and information to livestock and poultry producers. Animal manures are a potential source of human and animal pathogens. Among the pathogens of concern are Escherichia coli, Salmonella, Entamoeba, Giardia, Campylobacter and Cryptosporidium.

  16. Amoebiosis Entaboeba histolytica is found in polluted water in warm climates. It is a disease of large intestine and can invade the blood stream and liver forming abscesses. It is transmitted through drinking water contaminated from feces. Highly infectious.

  17. Survival of E. histolytica in water courses Grows well in warm waters especially if rice grains or E.coli are present as substrates. Discharge of sewage into river waters encourages growth of the disease agent.

  18. Are pathogens present in animal manures and human sewage destroyed by Anaerobic Digesters?

  19. Fate of Entamoeba histolytica

  20. Acetate reduces E. histolytica metabolism Increasing acetate concentrations inhibit uptake of E. coli and rice starch grains by host cells. Also inhibits metabolism of starch grains.

  21. Cryptosporidiumand disease The incidence of Cryptosporidium parvum in manures requires that removal is effective before use as fertilizer on land. Thermophilic anaerobic digestion offers such a potential. The intestinal parasite Cryptosporidium parvum has increased in incidence in drinking waters worldwide and requires development of control systems.

  22. Question: Does Thermophilic A D remove the infective stages of Cryptosporidium and Giardia spp. from animal wastes?

  23. Removal of Cryptosporidium

  24. Removal of Giardia

  25. Conclusions • DNA Detection of Giardia muris and Cryptosporidium muris • Low end detection in positive controls ranged from 1-1000 cysts • No DNA signal has been recovered from digested samples for either species • Does the action of Thermophilic Anaerobic Digestion remove the infective stages of Cryptosporidium and Giardia spp. from animal waste streams? YES

  26. Salmonella Removal and Thermophilic Anaerobic Digestion

  27. Acetate Influence on Coliform Reduction

  28. Total Coliform Reduction

  29. Plant Pathogens. Use of digester material as fertilizer must be free of plant pathogens. Fusarium oxysporum -wilt fungus affecting tomatoes, potatoes and tobacco. Killed in Digesters in 4 days at mesophilic temperatures. Corynebacterium michiganense -bacterial pathogen causing vascular wilt in Solanaceae plants. Killed in 24 hours in AD.

  30. Survival of Potato Root Eelworms in Digesters

  31. Carbon Balance Conversion of organic carbon in waste materials using microbial anaerobic digestion processes enables the carbon to be released as CO2 and CH4. About 90% of the carbon energy locked in organic molecules transfer to methane during methanogenesis, (McInerney, Bryant and Stafford, 1980).

  32. Anaerobic Digestion of Poultry Litter- It began with a visit to WVSU • On our visit to WVSU we met Dr. Mark Chatfield and John Bombardiere • We also learned quite a bit about digesters • Daryl Bishop, CEM General Manager Pepco Energy Services also attended the trip (taking pic)

  33. WVSU Digester • 10,000 gallon • Anaerobic • No Oxygen • Thermophilic • 125 -140º F • 10 Day HRT

  34. We learned that Anaerobic Digesters Are……….. • are producers of clean, renewable energy • A component of waste and nutrient management systems • Pathogen and odor killers • Biological systems- managing the “bugs” • Proven/Mature technology for processing organic wastes, including poultry litter

  35. Feedstock- Litter from Poultry Houses is a great feedstock

  36. Products of Anaerobic Digestion • Biogas-below being flared, we will produce electricity- methane is 21 times worse than carbon in destroying the ozone • Solid fertilizer and compost • Liquid fertilizer

  37. Poultry Litter Results • Litter Conversion to Biogas Materialscf biogas/ton litterCH4% Crust/Cake 8,000 - 9,000 60 Cleanout after one flock 8,000 - 9,000 65 Litter Shed for 4 months 5,000 - 6,000 56 Cleanout after six flocks 7,000 - 8,000 58

  38. Biogas Components • Methane CH4 • 55% - 65% • Carbon Dioxide CO2 • 33% - 43% • Hydrogen Sulfide H2S • removed • Water • removed

  39. Feasibility Study Grant! • Working through the Cumberland Farm Bureau we have obtained a $37,000 grant to determine the feasibility of building such a digester facility in Cumberland, Virginia • Many of the questions we want answers to related to the business case for the facility that would require less than 10 acres

  40. Uses of Biogas • Electricity – sold as green power for a premium • Boiler- to preheat the digester to 134 degrees and clean trucks for bio-security • Direct use as Natural Gas substitute- direct sale to co-located businesses or neighbors

  41. Potential Revenue • Gas or electric sales – premium prices 7cents per kWhr- recent increase noted • Fertilizer sales- liquid effluent is high in nitrogen and no pathogens- solid as much as $125/ton • Certified organic compost- pots, pellets (golf course gold) • Tipping fees – located near landfill where we could get green waste for the digester- • Carbon Credits

  42. ECL Digester Plants- Cumberland Plant similar scale as picture on right

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