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Environment

Why Our Next Fuel Source May Come from Our Own Waste

By Greg Breining, Yale Environment 360. Posted July 13, 2009.


One researcher has figured out how to use human waste to make the fuel of the future while also treating sewage.
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In his quest for a fuel of the future, Roger Ruan has found a valuable resource in something nobody else wants -- the wastewater from Minneapolis' largest sewage treatment plant.

The University of Minnesota professor is tapping into this rather unlikely source to grow single-celled algae and produce a diesel-like biofuel. He is one of many researchers around the world working to make biofuel from algae at a price that is competitive with gasoline and diesel fuel. But Ruan's project -- along with several other sewage-to-fuel experiments -- has a distinct advantage over competing algae-to-fuel efforts: His nutrient-rich feedstock is free and available at a nearly constant rate all year long.

And perhaps most importantly, Ruan's algae can not only be used to produce fuel, but can also clean up the wastewater, potentially saving millions of dollars.

"That's what we're after," says Jason Willet, finance director for Metropolitan Council Environmental Services, which operates the wastewater plant and has helped fund Ruan's research.

A single acre of algae, even in an inefficient open pond, can produce 5,000 gallons of biodiesel per year, says Ruan--100 times as much as soybeans. And unlike many other algal biofuel experiments, Ruan's work does not rely on food-based crops, such as sugar cane, as a feedstock to produce the algae.

"This (sewage-based biofuel) potentially is a very, very good energy crop," says Ruan, a professor of biosystems and agricultural engineering. "Potentially its yield can be much, much higher than starch from corn or oil from soybeans. The main reason is that it can grow at a much, much faster rate."

Growing fuel-producing algae in waste is not Ruan's idea alone. The concept drew international attention in 2006 when a startup in New Zealand called Aquaflow successfully harvested biofuel from open-air ponds at wastewater treatment plants. The company expects to be able to produce the biofuel on a large scale, and recently attracted the attention of major players in the airline industry by announcing it had distilled a special blend that meets the technical specifications for jet fuel.

Aquaflow's advances, combined with the Pentagon's interest in biofuels as an alternative to conventional jetfuels, has sparked a flurry of academic and industrial research in the United States. A team at the University of Virginia has been working to maximize the efficiency of the algae-growing process, and the chemistry department at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., has built a small-scale bioreactor at a local wastewater treatment plant that may eventually be able to produce $600,000 worth of fuel per year.

Even NASA has thrown its hat in the ring, with researchers working on the development of floating greenhouses for algae cultivation. The bags are stocked with human waste and sown with species of freshwater algae, and then deployed into the ocean. The semi-porous plastic membrane allows the exchange of CO2 and oxygen to continue uninhibited, but prevents the salty seawater from disturbing the fecund growing conditions inside. Soaking up the sun and feasting on the nutrients in the sewage, the algae produce fat-laden cells that can be harvested and refined into fuels.

U.S. entrepreneurs have also entered the market. In June, Indianapolis-based Algaewheel contracted with the city of Reynolds, Ind., to construct a module at a wastewater treatment facility that uses a wheel-like rotating contraption to filter incoming sewage through a series of algae cultures. The fuel generated from the process will be used to power the facility.

In Minneapolis, Ruan and the Metro Council are conducting research with the intention of designing a demonstration algae-to-fuel plant within about a year.

The Metropolitan Wastewater Treatment Plant sits beside the Mississippi River, just downstream from St. Paul. The 10th-largest plant of its kind in the country, it treats sewage from three-fourths of the Twin Cities metro area -- more than 200 million gallons a day. Some of its low brick buildings, adorned by graceful Art Deco lettering, date to the plant's origin in 1938. From a rooftop, the 170-acre grounds is a warren of basins, tanks, stacks, and pipes.

Incoming sewage is screened for trash and chunks, then runs into settling ponds to remove solids. In aeration ponds, carefully managed populations of microbes break down organics. After more settling to remove dead microbes, wastewater is sterilized with liquid chlorine before being discharged into the river. The effluent is often cleaner and clearer than the river itself. Amazingly, there is barely a whiff of odor.

As clean as the effluent is, Minnesota is considering new standards that will most likely require further reduction of phosphorous and nitrogen. Excess phosphorus is a real concern in the Land of 10,000 Lakes because it causes unsightly algae blooms and fish kills. Nitrogen sluicing off farmland throughout the Midwest is blamed for the hypoxic dead zone at the Mississippi River's mouth. But meeting the new standards through conventional treatment could easily cost "hundreds of million of dollars" a year, says Willet. "We need to find some options."


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See more stories tagged with: biofuel, fuel, wastewater, algae

Greg Breining is a journalist and author whose articles and essays about travel, science, and nature have appeared in The New York Times, Audubon, National Geographic Traveler, and many other publications.

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View:
Go for it
Posted by: Axiom69 on Jul 13, 2009 9:24 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I would say they should start developing it even if the end product (diesel) costs $20 a gallon. They shouldn't worry about trying to get it down to $3 dollars a gallon. As they refine the process and advancements in technology occur that cost will come down. Even if it is only a slight decrease it will eventually be cheaper than regular diesel anyways. The most recent spike was over $5 dollars a gallon and the spikes keep going up. In the next 10-20 years I'm sure $20 dollars a gallon will seem cheap.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» cheap , clean waste to energy Posted by: daryll dickson
finally some crumbs of good news
Posted by: cori on Jul 14, 2009 5:33 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our earth can give us everything but we treat her and ourselves so badly.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

Better than polluting the riverways an ocean
Posted by: Changling on Jul 15, 2009 7:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do wish to know how clean this bio-fuel is too. No mention in the article. Also $20 a gallon won't matter if you have a vehicle that gets 100-150 miles to that gallon through the electric hybrids. More of them the better. Less people, more jobs; reuse, recycle and biodegrade are all we need to sustain ourselves on this spaceship earth.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

the solution to climate change
Posted by: dbaker on Jul 16, 2009 9:44 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dennis Baker
penticton bc canada V2A6Z3

dennisbaker2003@hotmail.com
RE : The solution to climate change.
( human excrement + nuclear waste = hydrogen )
The USA discharges Trillions of tons of sewage annually, sufficient quantity to sustain electrical generation requirements of the USA.
Redirecting existing sewage systems to containment facilities would be a considerable infrastructure modification project.
It is the intense radiation that causes the conversion of organic material into hydrogen, therefore what some would consider the most dangerous waste because of its radiation would be the best for this utilization.
I believe the combination of clean water and clean air, will increase the life expectance of humans.
yours sincerely
Dennis Baker

I am to held under house arrest for one year awaiting a preliminary hearing on the drugs RCMP planted to prevent my running in an Provincial election against BC Speaker of the House Bill Barisoff.

The lawyer quit when I refused to relinquish my right to ask questions of Police.

In Iran they at least let the candidates run, and
the media covered the corruption!

From my perspective Iran now exceeds Canada on issues related to Civil Liberties, Human Rights and Democracy!

Whats up with that !

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» waste to energy, clean, cheap Posted by: daryll dickson
Algae is capable of producing the chemical equivilant of light sweet crude oil.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jul 16, 2009 10:04 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
And it's carbon neutral too in addition to calling this renewable petroleum. Now all we need is localized and decentralized production. No more wars and no more drilling.

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waste to energy --proven , cheap, clean up landfils
Posted by: daryll dickson on Jul 17, 2009 7:51 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
W2 energy can and is now doing this check them out
W2 Energy designs mass-to-energy
plants which convert feedstocks
into syngas, using patented plasma-based reactor technology.

Patented gas-to-liquid catalysts convert the syngas into hydrocarbon liquids and waxes, and patented steam engines (See the new "Steam Ray" now running) convert the heat generated into electricity. The electricity generated, can be sold to the grid, and will also the supply the plant's power requirements. Learn more about the W2 Energy technology. The following feedstocks can be converted.
coal (clean coal technology)

municipal solid waste
agricultural waste
human and animal waste
tires and plastics
medical waste
W2’s mass-to-energy technology can convert any hydrocarbon feedstock (including coal, municipal solid waste, agricultural waste and sewage) into electricity and liquid fuel (gasoline, JP8 jet fuel and ultra low sulfur diesel). Our technology filters out the harmful by-products such as hydrochloric acid, and makes additional fuel out of the greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide and nitrogen oxides).

One 4 ton per day system including the NT Plasmatron gasifier, the Steam Ray steam engine, the SunFilter algae reactor and the SmartFuel gas-to-liquid reactor, can fit on a single 45-foot tractor trailer bed.

The W2 Energy technology is modular and scaleable. 4 tons per day, or can be deployed in plants processing 10,000 tons per day or more of any hydrocarbon feedstock.

Other W2 technologies include:

PAG (Plasma Assisted Gassifier) mass to energy reactor

SEGS (Small Energy Generating Systems)
Energy Inc. develops renewable energy technologies and applies it to new generation power systems. Specifically, W2 Energy Inc.'s plasma assisted biomass to energy plants utilize state of the art technologies to produce green energy, both fuel (sulfur free diesel) and electricity, at the most efficient cost in capital investment and production per/barrel, per/Megawatt.

W2 Energy Inc. has seasoned management and cutting edge technology. W2 Energy Inc. owns a large technology portfolio of patents and know-how that has been extensively validated and ready for commercial production.

The W2 Energy BPR Biomass Plasma Reactor breaks down biomass or coal using the chemical energy stored in the biomass itself; the plasma acts as a high temperature catalyst. Unlike typical plasma reactors that utilize convection of the intense heat produced by the plasma, our BPR can produce enough Syngas (H2, CO) to feed a 10,000 barrel per day synthetic diesel plant and 100 Megawatt steam turbine with a mere 4 MW input. Since our unique process works in this manner most if not all the CO2 produced by the process is converted into Carbon suboxides in the form of humic acid and is mixed within the ash to produce high grade organic fertilizer. Therefore the process is completely C02 neutral even using coal or peat as base fuel.

Municipal solid waste - Agricultural waste - Human and animal waste - Tires and plastics - Medical waste
Here is the CEO and website

M. McLaren CEO
(519) 341-3185

www.w2energy.com

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

know how clean
Posted by: hahaho on Jul 30, 2009 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do wish to know how clean this bio-fuel is too. No mention in the article. Also $20 a gallon won't matter if you have a vehicle that gets 100-150 miles to that gallon through the electric hybrids. More of them the better. Less people, more jobs; reuse, recycle and biodegrade are all we need to sustain ourselves on this spaceship earth. links of london tiffany.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

know how clean
Posted by: hahaho on Jul 30, 2009 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do wish to know how clean this bio-fuel is too. No mention in the article. Also $20 a gallon won't matter if you have a vehicle that gets 100-150 miles to that gallon through the electric hybrids. More of them the better. Less people, more jobs; reuse, recycle and biodegrade are all we need to sustain ourselves on this spaceship earth. links of london tiffany.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

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