As Germany attempts to reduce its dependence on Russian gas, the strong fumes from manure and other organic waste on farms could act as an alternative energy source.
An hour’s drive west of Berlin, a strong smell emanates from three large cylinders in the middle of a muddy field on Kaim’s property, which is shared with 100 dairy cows.
Every day, tonnes of organic waste, mainly manure, corn and grass, is poured into these receptacles.
In a process called ‘methanisation’ fuelled by bacteria, the organic matter is transformed into gas.
This mini power plant supplies heating to about 20 homes in the village of Ribbeck, known for a pear tree whose praises the 19th century writer Theodor Fontane once sang in a classic poem.
The farmer prides himself on “independent” energy production against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine, and calls on the state to “adopt simpler authorisation procedures” to help biogas become a bigger part of the mix in Germany.
The entire biogas sector is jumping at the chance to grow, driven by the current crisis, as Berlin looks to quickly curb its dependence on Moscow for energy.
Biogas, also known as renewable natural gas, is “renewable” in the sense that humans and animals will keep producing waste – but we don’t want to encourage generating more waste for the sole purpose of creating more biogas.
Before the Ukraine war, Germany imported 55 per cent of its natural gas from Russia, half its coal and around 35 per cent of its oil.
Signalling that this message is being heard, the German government has announced its desire to “increase the production of ‘green’ gas” this month, as part of moves to boost resilience in the face of rising energy prices.
Why biogas will overtake the original Nord Stream gas project
For the moment, biogas accounts for only 1 per cent of consumption in Europe’s top economy.
“We could immediately increase our production by 20 per cent, and replace 5 per cent of Russian gas, if some regulatory barriers were lifted tomorrow,” Horst Seide, president of the German federation of biogas producers, told AFP.
A concerted effort to boost the sector would allow it in the long term “to produce two-thirds of the capacity of Nord Stream 2”, the gas pipeline project which Berlin suspended after last month’s Russian invasion of Ukraine, according to the industry group.
The history of biogas in Germany goes back decades. In the early 2000s, the country threw its weight behind the sector, making it a European leader. Half of the continent’s methanisers are located in Germany.
But beginning in 2014, the German government reversed course, deciding to curb the production capacity of the industry with a complex system of targeted subsidies.
The main objection stemmed from the massive industrialisation of the sector, which posed serious environmental problems linked to the increased risks of water pollution and leakage of polluting gas.
A land grab for energy use, to the detriment of food production has also been a cause of concern. The agriculture ministry says 14 per cent of Germany’s farmland is already used for the generation of energy.
As a result of disincentives, the opening of new biogas facilities has declined sharply, from 1,526 in 2013 to just 94 in 2014, just after the regulatory change, to a mere 60 in 2021.
Source: https://www.euronews.com/
Tags: Biogas, Germany, Natiral gas, Renewable, Russian Oil
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