Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Peter Ciborowski Minnesota Pollution Control Agency

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Peter Ciborowski Minnesota Pollution Control Agency"— Presentation transcript:

1 Anaerobic Digestion in the Dairy Industry: Pollution Control Opportunities
Peter Ciborowski Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Air Innovations Conference August 10, 2004

2 Anaerobic Digestions of Farms Wastes
1970s energy crisis: Anaerobic digestion as an energy source 1980s-1990s: Anaerobic digestion as a pollution control measure 2000s: ???

3 Stages of Anaerobic Digestion
Hydrolysis: Liquefaction of complex organic compounds to simpler forms by hydrolytic bacteria; principal end products include soluble sugars, amino acids, peptides, long-chain fatty acids. Acidogenesis: Metabolization of the products of hydrolysis by Acidogenic bacteria; principal end products include short-chain volatile organic acids (propionic, butyric, acetic and formic acids), CO2, and H2.

4 Stages of Anaerobic Digestion (cont.)
Acetogenesis: Reduction of CO2 and catabolization of short-chain fatty acids produced during acidogenesis by synthrophic acetogenic and homoacetogenic bacteria; principal end products include acetate, CO2, H2. Methanogenesis: Reduction of CO2 and cleaved acetate by Methanogens; end products include CH4, CO2,, trace Gases.

5 Anaerobic Digester Types for Dairy Farms
Warm Winter Climates Covered Anaerobic Lagoon Cold/Cool Winter Climates Plug Flow Digester Complete Mix Digester Slurry-Loop Digester Anaerobic Sequencing Batch Reactor (ASBR)

6 Operating Parameters for Medium-Rate Farm Digesters
Temperature C pH VFA mg/l Organic loading rate 3-7kg VS/d/m3 of digester volume Retention time days Total solids content 7-12%

7 Digester Size and Cost Parameters
Needed Digester volume ft3 per cow 500 head example dairy Manure Production 30 tons/day Volatile Solids Production tons/day Digester size 17,500 ft3 CH4 output Mcf/day Capital investment(a) $250,000 ($1995) (a) At $500 (%1995) per cow

8 Environmental Problems Associated with Dairy Manure Management
Volatile fatty acids production H2S production and emission Ammonia emission Ozone and PM2.5 precursor emission (e.g., soil NOx emissions) Methane emission Fine particles

9 Environmental Problems Associated with Dairy Manure Management (cont.)
Biological oxygen demand (BOD) Manure phosphorus imbalance Water-borne pathogens

10 Environmental Benefits and Drawbacks of Anaerobic Digestion
Environmental Advantages Reduced biological oxygen demand Odor reduction (e.g., VFAs, phenol, mercaptan, H2S) Pathogen destruction Reduced fly and rodent problems Increased nitrogen availability for crop growth Improved manure physical quality

11 Environmental Benefits and Drawbacks of Anaerobic Digestion (cont.)
Environmental Advantages Reduced manure phosphorus imbalance Reduced methane emissions Avoided emissions of fossil CO2 and Hg Environmental Drawbacks Possible increased ammonia volatilization SOx emission

12 Measures of Control Potential of Anaerobic Digestion
% reduction Manure solids % Manure volatile solids % Biological oxygen demand % Chemical oxygen demand % Volatile fatty acids high (a) Pathogens 90% Methane % (a) 75-95% for digestion of swine manure

13 Energy Production from Anaerobic Digestion of Dairy Manure
ft3 biogas/cow/day Biogas energy content (Btu/ft3) kWh (e) /cow/day Gal LPG-equiv-avail/cow/day kWhr (e) /animal/year ,117 Gal LPG-equivalent-available/yr kW(e)-equivalent animal numbers

14 Energy Production Potential: 500 Cow Dairy
Generation capacity: 30 to 60 kW Annual electrical generation: 270,000 to 559,000 kwh Gross annual energy production (MMBtu): 10 to 20

15 Sensitive Terms for Economic Analysis of Anaerobic Digestion
Manure solids content Cost of capital Materials cost Value of replacement energy Purchase price of excess farm-generated electricity IRR hurdle

16 Herd Size Threshold for Economic Viability of Anaerobic Digestion
dairy cows Published literature 2001 estimate for Minnesota (a) no policy intervention $0.015/kwh production subsidy Best guess, current conditions (a) Free stall, flush parlor and feed apron and scrape rest, 10% IRR hurdle, $0.07/kwh farm electric rates, purchase price for excess electricity $ /kwh, no credit for pollution control.

17 Caveats Anaerobic digestion works best with new dairies and full integration of digester into dairy design (e.g., gravity manure flow, waste heat use, high manure total solids) Local conditions are important Accounting for the money-value of time is essential Lesson: Anaerobic digestion is not for everyone. Certainly anaerobic digestion is not for small producers The economics of anaerobic digestion depend critically about what you assume about the future cost of energy, materials and capital and future yields from alternative uses of investment dollars

18 Covering Preexisting Anaerobic Lagoons
Inexpensive Minimum herd size for economic deployment smaller by half that of medium-rate digesters Where it can be deployed, the optimal use of anaerobic digestion

19 Anaerobic Digestion: Final Word
Anaerobic Digestion: Cross-media pollution control at a profit Availability of: MPCA, Anaerobic Digestion of Livestock Manure for Pollution Control and Energy Production: A Feasibility Assessment, March 2001, contact MPCA at


Download ppt "Peter Ciborowski Minnesota Pollution Control Agency"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google