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    What's this?
'Poop to power' program turns pig manure into sustainable energy
Duke University's Carbon Offsets Initiative has helped a North Carolina farm solve a waste problem without making a stink.

By

John Platt
Tue, Dec 27 2011 at 4:42 PM
 8

Related Topics:

Alternative Energy, Farming & Agriculture, Education
Pig farm

Photo: Neal Foley/Flickr

The nearly 9,000 hogs at Loyd Ray Farms in Yadkin County, N.C., produce 400,000 gallons of manure every week. Since the waste had too high a nitrogen content to be used as fertilizer, owner Loyd Bryant used to pump that waste into a local lagoon, where it released methane, ammonia and "an unholy stink," according to the Los Angeles Times.
 
But now all of that waste is going to good use. Thanks to Duke University's new Carbon Offsets Initiative, the 154-acre farm now gets half of its electricity from a new waste-to-fuel system that has also solved the environmental problems caused by the manure. It reduces emissions from the waste, improves the health of Loyd's hogs, and creates a fertilizer he will use to grow corn, wheat and beans.
 
According to the Carbon Offsets Initiative website, the waste-to-fuel project "collects methane generated by hog waste and burns it to support the operations of the innovative system and create electricity for use on the farm. The destruction of the methane — a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent than carbon dioxide — creates GHG [greenhouse gas] offsets, and the renewable energy generated by the system creates renewable energy credits."
 
The $1.2 million system was the first full-scale offsets project completed in the Carbon Offsets Initiative. It was funded by Duke University, Duke Energy and Google — the university and Google will get carbon offset credits from the system — and was made from off-the-shelf parts and freely available designs.
 
The system "is not overly complicated and stands to yield many more benefits beyond energy production and environmental protection," Tatjana Vujic, director of the Carbon Offsets Initiative, told the Times. "Farmers like the idea of using every bit of what comes off their farms. They can manage their waste and save money while doing it.''
 
The system has several components. First, the hog waste is placed in an anaerobic digester, which contains bacteria that consume the manure and release methane gas. The methane is then burned to power a 65-kilowatt microturbine, which generates electricity to power support the entire waste management system and much of the farm's normal operations. After the manure is processed in the digester, liquid waste enters an aeration bin, where it is treated for ammonia and other pollutants. The resulting water can be used for irrigation or for flushing out barns. By the time the system is done, it has met all of North Carolina's environmental standards for reduction of odors and emissions.
 
"It would sound pretty crazy at one time, but we see it works," Bryant told local station Fox8 in October.
 
Under North Carolina law, the state's utilities must get 0.07 percent of their electricity from hog waste beginning in 2012 and 0.2 percent by 2018, the same amount it must generate from solar.

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anonymous
Ringler Energy ... Sep 06 2012 at 11:48 AM

Ohio is doing now supporting anaerobic digestion projects. We are currently installing one on our farm, to cut down on odors produced by the pigs and generate our own power.

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anonymous
Ringler Energy Sep 06 2012 at 11:46 AM

Great blog. Interesting way to 'recycle'.

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anonymous
Sheila Hamanaka Jan 03 2012 at 9:55 AM
I agree with a previous poster - "Since when is HuffPost supporting "factory" farms?" Regardless of what you do with the poop, intensive mass farming of animals is cruel + ruins the environment. What's next, capturing the energy released by bombs? Occupy Farms is trying to save small family farms. Put your articles where your ethics are. Stop encouraging people to put on consumer blinders to the true cost of commodities. How many people think about the millions of Black Africans who have died
.... More
in Congo in proxy wars over coltan - that key ingredient in their fancy new iPhones and other mobiles?
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anthony_2
anthony_2 Jan 01 2012 at 11:42 PM

very cool...they could have mixed the manure with carbon (leaves, straw,) and that would have balanced out the nitrogen. Lots of fuss minimized...but yeah this is great anyhow. But the high nitrogen argument is definitely fixable. Grow Paradise!!!

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anonymous
bhazo the mad Jan 01 2012 at 4:46 PM

Who runs Bartertown?

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starbuck
Starbuck Jan 01 2012 at 3:20 AM

All I can say is Thank God! for relieving the pig poop problem at this farm. Sounds like an awful lot of hogs per acre. But then again, if North Carolina is mandating that state utilities must get a certain percent of their electricity from hog waste pronto, there just must be an awful lot hog raising going on and I had no clue. In all seriousness, this sounds like a win-win situation to me.

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anonymous
Vikki Brink Dec 28 2011 at 1:37 PM

Is there anyone out there that understand this process in more detail that would like to sit down with me to work up a process to present to the city of los angeles and county of los angeles as for horse manure being used for this same purpose. Please contact me at summerhawkranch@hotmail.com

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anonymous
Guest Dec 29 2011 at 1:38 AM
You can learn more about this by watching this video from Capstone Microturbinehttp://www.microturbine.com/news/video/view.asp?video=sheboygan This video discusses waste water treatment plants use of digester gas. On the surface, your idea for implementing something similar for horse manure similar to what was done for pig poo probably won't work. The reason being that you need a lot of poo. The swine farm that powered this one 65kw microturbine contained about 9000 pigs where the poo is flushed
.... More
from the floor into holding tanks, a wet mess. Then correlate that to the human waste processed by the Sheboygan plant. I don't think this would be cost effective for a horse ranch.
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