GPS News  
From Dairy Waste To Electric Power

Graduate Environmental Science and Engineering students Rajiv Narula (left) and Kevin Hickey collect manure from the free stall barn at North Harbor Dairy, Sackets Harbor, N.Y., as part of a state-funded bioenergy project.
by Staff Writers
Sackets Harbor NY (SPX) Jan 05, 2007
Cow manure, waste silage, cheese whey are waste products to some, but viable energy sources to enterprising Clarkson University researchers who are helping area farmers meet their own energy needs. Last year's New York State budget included a $1-million appropriation for Clarkson to investigate ways that dairy waste from cheese manufacturing and dairy farms can be used as feedstock to produce biogas to generate heat and electric power on New York farms.

"Biogas derived from the anaerobic digestion of manure and whey represents an important biofuel that could provide significant economic, environmental and social benefits at thousands of farms," says Stefan Grimberg, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering. "Farmers and dairy processing facilities can displace purchased sources of heat and power, reduce wastewater treatment and environmental compliance costs, and mitigate exposure to fluctuating power prices."

Grimberg is the principle investigator on a $2-million project to design and build an anaerobic digester and power/heat recovery system at a working dairy farm in Jefferson County, N.Y. The interdisciplinary research team from Clarkson also includes electrical engineers and social scientists.

The researchers will use the project to showcase emerging technologies. The project also promises to yield important improvements over current digester technologies through the development of an optimization model for the integrated energy system and through mechanisms to separate sand used for bedding from the manure.

"More than half the anaerobic digesters built before the mid-1980s failed to operate properly," Grimberg explains. "We are interested in improving the technology and reliability of the system."

In-depth interviews with New York state farmers that have installed anaerobic digesters are being performed in order to discern the motivations for adopting the technology as well as how anaerobic digestion technology is integrated into their farming systems.

"There is very little data available on farm-level perceptions, knowledge and attitudes toward anaerobic digester technology," explains Associate Professor of Sociology Rick Welsh, a member of the research team. "Such data is critical to inform the design of anaerobic digesters, as well as to create public policy that can provide helpful information to farmers about their options in this area."

The team will also complete a lifecycle accounting of the environmental benefits from diverting waste products to an energy system and the associated displacement of fossil fuel sources.

Researchers plan to use the model as a basis for extending digester/energy system technologies across the North Country, which could eventually be implemented on a wider commercial scale. "This pilot study represents that important intermediate step in technology transfer between initial laboratory research and commercialization," says Grimberg.

The project has also received support from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, the Department of Energy and the United States Department of Agriculture.

Related Links
Clarkson University
Powering The World in the 21st Century at Energy-Daily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Denmark Aims To Introduce Bio-Ethanol By End Of 2007
Copenhagen (AFP) Jan 4, 2007
The Danish government wants to introduce bio-ethanol in petrol and diesel by the end of 2007, a spokesman for the ruling Liberal Party told Danish television TV2 News on Thursday. The plan is part of the centre-right government's long-term energy strategy for 2025 due to be presented soon.









  • Chrysler Launches Pitch To Expand Outside US
  • Honda Says Fuel-Cell Cars Can Be Mass-Produced By 2018

  • HisdeSat To Provide Communications Services For The Belgium Defence Ministry

  • Raytheon Awarded Subcontract for Sea-Based X-Band Radar Sustainment Support
  • Raytheon Completes Negotiations Billion Dollar Contract For JLENS Development
  • Lockheed Martin Provides Proven Solutions For Missile Defense
  • Israel Could Abandon Own Missiles For US System



  • In Record Wildfire Season, NOAA Satellites Aid US Fire Managers
  • Emergency Measures In Hong Kong After Web Chaos

  • New Molecules Fastest Ever For Optical Technologies
  • Dresden Chosen For Site Of New E-paper Factory
  • The Dawn Of A New Year Calls For A Certain Escape
  • New Laboratory Will Focus Research On 'Scintillating' Materials

  • Futuristic Tools And Toys At Largest Consumer Electronics Show
  • Robotic Crawler Detects Wear In Power Lines

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement