Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Garbage Powered Garbage Trucks

Why hasn’t this been thought of before? This is a great example of using a substance that we pay to haul away to pay for the equipment that hauls it away.

California is backing an initiative between the Linde Group and Waste Management to build a liquefied natural gas facility that will produce clean liquid fuel from landfill gas using municipal waste incinerators. The facility is expected to open in 2009 and will produce up to 13,000 gallons of fuel per day. The ground-breaking project will be the largest of its kind and will enable California to tap into a valuable renewable source of clean energy while greatly reducing our dependence on fossil fuels.

The collaboration between these two industries is the result of the U.S. EPA’s Landfill Methane Outreach Program which is designed to find a way to effectively use landfill gas as an energy source. Landfill gas (LFG) is created from the decomposition of organic materials in an anaerobic environment. A variety of gaseous products are created through this process, primarily carbon dioxide and methane. Carbon dioxide is likely to leach out of the landfill because it is soluble in water. Methane (a powerful greenhouse gas), on the other hand, which is less soluble in water and lighter than air, is likely to migrate out of the landfill. Landfill gas energy facilities capture the methane (the principal component of natural gas) and combust it for energy.

There are approximately 445 operational LFG energy projects in the United States. In addition, about 110 projects are currently under construction or are exploring development options and opportunities.

Perhaps the best way to show the effectiveness of capturing and using LFG can be best explained through numbers:

In the year 2007, all operational LFG energy projects in the United States prevented the release of more than 21 million metric tons of carbon equivalent.

* This reduction is the carbon equivalent of the annual greenhouse gas emissions from more than 14 million passenger vehicles or the carbon sequestered annually by nearly 18 million acres of pine or fir forests.

* This reduction also has the same environmental benefit as preventing the carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the consumption of nearly 182 million barrels of oil or from the burning of more than 408,000 railcars’ worth of coal.

Burning methane releases only carbon dioxide and water. It is much cleaner than burning coal and oil which release a variety of potentially harmful air pollutants.

This may sound like a small step, and you might think it isn’t enough to make a difference, but I believe that this small step taken together will all of the other small steps that are being taken will go a long way towards combating global warming.

Source:

Landfill Methane Outreach Program

1 comment:

Kate said...

This small step is a good one. if every step was a good one, we would be there by now!

I like the maple syrup one too. if someone had discovered this BEFORE they started using oil, imagine where we could be now? I may not have to have stupid water restrictions for growing my vegetables etc etc

Thanks again Greg.I am temporarily all out of writing ideas! But I am sure something will burst forth soon.