German town to be powered by manure

A GERMAN town will become the first in the world to be powered by animal waste when it launches a biogas network this year.

A GERMAN town will become the first in the world to be powered by animal waste when it launches a biogas network this year.

Lünen, north of Dortmund, will use cow and horse manure as well as other organic material from local farms to provide cheap and sustainable electricity for its 90,000 residents.

Biogas is already used around the world – it will power buses in Oslo from September – but Lünen claims to be the only town to have built a dedicated biogas network.

Material such as animal slurry and spoiled crops from local farms will be fed into heated tanks, where natural fermentation will break it down into methane and carbon dioxide – the same basic ingredients as natural gas.

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This biogas can then be burned to generate electricity and heat in a combined heat and power plant (CHP) before the heat is distributed through a new biogas pipeline being built underground.

The plant can produce 6.8mw, enough to power and heat 26,000 houses, according to Peter Kindt, director of Alfagy Ltd, which distributes CHP plants.

Mr Kindt insists that residents will not find their living rooms scented with slurry every time they turn on the heating. “A biogas network is barely noticeable,” he said. – (Guardian service)