What is biogas? | National Grid Group
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Biogas: 6 fascinating facts
1. Biogas is a gas of many names
Biogas is most commonly also known as biomethane. It’s also sometimes called marsh gas, sewer gas, compost gas and swamp gas in the US.
Biogas is a naturally occurring and renewable source of energy, resulting from the breakdown of organic matter. Biogas is not to be confused with ‘natural’ gas, which is a non-renewable source of power.
2. Biogas and biomass: the similarities and differences
Biomass and biogas are both biofuels; they can be burnt to produce energy. But biomass is the solid, organic material. Biomass has been used as an energy source since humans first discovered fire and burnt wood, plants and animal dung to create energy.
Today, many power stations run by burning a biomass of compressed wood pellets – a by-product of timber and furniture-making. By replacing fossil-fuel coal, biomass enables renewable electricity to be produced.
Another way to think of the differences is that biomass is the raw material and biogas is the end product.
When biomass decomposes naturally, or at industrial scale in an anaerobic digester, biogas is produced.
Another way to think of the differences is that biomass is the raw material and biogas is the end product.
3. Biogas is not a new discovery
The anaerobic process of decomposition (or fermentation) of organic matter has been happening in nature for millions of years, even before fossil fuels, and continues to happen all around us in the natural world. Today’s industrial conversion of organic waste into energy in biogas plants is simply fast-forwarding nature’s ability to recycle its useful resources.
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The first human use of biogas is thought to date back to 3,000BC in the Middle East, when the Assyrians used biogas to heat their baths.
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A 17th century chemist, Jan Baptist van Helmont, discovered that flammable gases could come from decaying organic matter. Van Helmont is also responsible for bringing the word ‘gas’, from the Greek word chaos, into the science vocabulary.
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The first large anaerobic digestion plant dates back to 1859 in a leper colony in Bombay.
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An inventive Victorian engineer, John Webb from Birmingham, created the Sewage Lamp, which converted sewage into biogas to light street lamps. The only remaining Webb Sewer Lamp in London is now just off The Strand in Carting Lane – or as some wags would have it, Farting Lane.
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Anaerobic digestion was used as a means to treat municipal wastewater, before chemical treatments. In the developing world the anaerobic process is still recognised as an inexpensive, natural alternative to chemicals and the reduction of dysentery bacteria.
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And let’s not forget that in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome the post-apocalyptic settlement Bartertown, run by Tina Turner’s terrifying Aunty Entity, is powered by a pig-farm biogas system with biogas used to power the desert-chasing vehicles.
4. Today China leads the world in the use of biogas
China has the largest number of biogas plants, with an estimated 50 million households using biogas. These are mostly in rural areas and small-scale home and village plants.
5. In the UK there are 109 biogas plants currently in operation, while the US has over 2,200 sites producing biogas
The first UK biogas plant was built in 2011, with the introduction of the government’s Renewable Heat Incentive scheme. Growth saw its first peak in 2016 when 33 new plants were built, according to the Anaerobic Digestion and Bioresources Association.
In 2020, a Somerset dairy farm owned by Biocow was the first to plug its biogas production directly into the national transmission system.
The US has over 2,200 operational sites producing biogas in all 50 states – 250 anaerobic digesters on farms; 1,269 water resource recovery facilities using an anaerobic digester; 66 stand-alone systems that digest food waste; and, 652 landfill gas projects – according to the American Biogas Council.
They believe the potential for growth in the US biogas industry is huge, calculating that 103 trillion kilowatt hours of electricity could be produced each year; while reducing the emissions equivalent of removing 117 million passenger vehicles from the road.
6. Holiday food waste is enough to heat 25,000 homes with biogas
WRAP estimates that UK households, hospitality and food service, food manufacture, retail and wholesale sectors produce around 10 million tonnes of food waste per year. If this was all treated through anaerobic digestion, the industry could generate 11 TWh of biogas – enough to heat 830,000 homes – and cut emissions by 8.8 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent, or 2% of the UK’s annual emissions.
In the Christmas season alone, the UK wastes 270,000 tonnes of food. These leftover mince pies, roast vegetables and Christmas puddings would generate 300 GWh of biogas – enough to heat 25,000 homes – and cut carbon dioxide emissions by 236,000 tonnes.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that over 70 billion pounds (5000000000 stones) of food waste are discarded in landfills each year. 24% of all landfills solid waste is food, which is more than any other material in everyday trash. American waste increases 23% during the holiday season alone and this largely includes food waste. Landfills are the third-largest source of human-related methane emissions in the US, so reducing food waste is an important factor in contributing to reducing biogas emissions.
Now that’s food for thought.