Your choices:
1 Process heat/steam (50 - 150 °C); 2 Fuel: gaseous; 3 Biomass (digestible sludge)
What is your resource? | What do you want to deliver? | What is the service the customer wants? |
3 Biomass (digestible sludge) | District cooling | Comfortable indoor climate |
Biomass (fermentable sludge) | District heating | Electricity |
Biomass (solid) | Electricity | Process cooling (< 0 °C) |
Geothermal | 2 Fuel: Gaseous | 1 Process heat/steam (50 - 150 °C) |
Sunshine | Fuel: Liquid | Process heat (150 - 1000 °C) |
Water | Fuel: Solid | Process heat (> 1000 °C) |
Wind | Local cooling (ind. house) | Transport |
Residual oils/fats etc | Local heating (ind. house) |
Production of biogas through anaerobic digestion (AD) of animal manure and slurries as well as of a wide range of digestible organic wastes, converts these substrates into renewable energy and offers a natural fertiliser for agriculture. At the same time, it removes the organic fraction from the overall waste streams, increasing this way the efficiency of energy conversion by incineration of the remaining wastes and the biochemical stability of landfill sites.
The raw biogas can be used without any upgrading. In small scale applications, the gas may be burned directly in boilers for heat generation, though there will be a demand for a support burner for safety reasons.
The gas may easily be upgraded to sng-standard, injected into the European gas grid and made available by contracting to anyone connected to the grid. If such a contract is at hand, then will the industrial process qualify as operated on digestible sludge as the main energy source.