Top Banner
Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS [email protected] Renewable Energy Workshop Florida Public Service Commission January 19, 2007
19

Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS [email protected] Renewable Energy Workshop.

Mar 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Ian Mooney
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biogas Energy Potentialin Florida

Ann C. WilkieSoil and Water Science Department

University of Florida – IFAS

[email protected]

Renewable Energy Workshop

Florida Public Service CommissionJanuary 19, 2007

Page 2: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Electrical and/or thermal energy

Biofertilizer

Organic wastes Anaerobic

digestion

Biogas

Solar energy

Animal husbandry

Crop harvesting

Industrial processing

Human consumption

Photosynthesis

H2OCO2

Biogas Cycle

Energycrops

Page 3: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

ANAEROBIC DIGESTION

The microbial degradation of organic

compounds, in the absence of oxygen,

to biogas – a mixture of:

• Methane (50 to 70%)

• CO2 (30 to 50%)

• trace amounts of H2, NH3, and H2S.

Page 4: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

COMPLEXORGANICMATTER

SIMPLEORGANICS

ACETATEH2 / CO2

METHANE and CARBON DIOXIDE

LOW ODOR EFFLUENT

LIQUEFACTIONPHASE

GASIFICATIONPHASE

ACIDOGENS METHANOGENS

Page 5: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

FEEDSTOCKS

• Animal manures

• Industrial wastewaters

• Municipal wastewaters

• Municipal solid wastes

• Energy crops / crop residues

Page 6: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

BENEFITS OF ANAEROBIC DIGESTION

• Renewable energy

• BOD/COD reduction

• Odor reduction

• Pathogen reduction

• Nutrient conservation

• Greenhouse gas reduction

Page 7: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

BIOGAS – A BIOENERGY VECTOR

• Direct Utilization (Heat / Steam)

• Conversion to Bioelectricity (CHP)

• Natural Gas Pipeline

• Vehicular fuel

• Fuel Cells

• Methanol

• Biodiesel

Page 8: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biogas as fuel

Page 9: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Water heater at UF-IFAS Dairy powered by manure biogas

Page 10: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Natural Gas Bus - Brisbane

Page 11: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

BIOGAS PLANT

CORETECHNOLOGY

Page 12: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

FERMENTATION

DISTILLATION

BIOGAS

STILLAGE

ANAEROBICDIGESTION

ETHANOL

Page 13: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biomass Energy Crop

Page 14: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

WATER

SUNLIGHT

EnergyCrops

BiogasPlant

Biofertilizer

CO2

CO2 WATER

Methane

Green Grass to Green Gas

Page 15: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biomass

or

Waste Source

Energy Production

Natural Gas Equivalent(billion cu ft)

Electricity Equivalent(Megawatts)

Municipal wastewater 1 5.52 63

Dairy manure 1 2.96 34

Poultry manure 1 2.7 31

MSW 1 27.5 314

Energy crops 2 167 1908

Total 205.7 2350

Time to Implement: 1 Immediate (1-5 years), 2 Near term (5-7 years)

Florida Biogas Potential from Selected Sources: Annual Estimates

Page 16: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biogas is a sustainableenergy solution that is:

• Renewable

• Carbon dioxide neutral

• Locally based

thereby protecting the environment, creating jobs and strengthening local economies.

Page 17: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biogas power provides …

• Energy independence– Renewable natural gas

• Energy reliability– Based on locally based feedstocks

Page 18: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES

• Net metering

• Surplus sales agreement

• Standby charge

• Rate schedule

• Interconnection

Page 19: Biogas Energy Potential in Florida Ann C. Wilkie Soil and Water Science Department University of Florida – IFAS acwilkie@ufl.edu Renewable Energy Workshop.

Biogas Energy Potentialin Florida

Ann C. WilkieSoil and Water Science Department

University of Florida – IFAS

[email protected]

Renewable Energy Workshop

Florida Public Service CommissionJanuary 19, 2007