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Can Bio-CNG click: A primer on this coming of age tech that can deal with air pollution at 3 levels

  • November 30, 2022
  • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
  • Category: DPN Topics
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Can Bio-CNG click: A primer on this coming of age tech that can deal with air pollution at 3 levels

Subject: Environment

About Bio-CNG-

  • Bio-CNG, also known as Compressed Biogas (CBG), is an upgraded version of the humble biogas, the dung-based version of which serves as cooking fuel in many villages in India.

Process of production-

  • The first stage of the CBG process is pre-treatment. The waste is passed through a trommel screen to remove hard materials like coconut shells and pieces of wood.
  • The screened waste is shredded in a hammer mill and made into a slurry with water. This slurry is kept in the pre-digester tank in aerobic conditions for one-two day to attract microbes — the process is called hydrolysis.
  • It is then transferred to an anaerobic digester where it is retained for 20-25 days. It is at this stage — methanogenesis — that biogas is generated.
  • This gas contains 65 per cent methane, while the rest is carbon dioxide, hydrogen sulphide and water vapour.
  • The gas is stored in a balloon and then taken to a gas upgradation area.
  • It is passed through a wet and dry scrubber to remove hydrogen sulphide and carbon dioxide, respectively.
  • Methane, purified up to 95 per cent, is obtained here which is then compressed at high pressure in cylinders and sent off to filling stations.
  • This highly purified methane is similar in chemical properties to CNG derived from petroleum sources and can thus be used in vehicles.
  • Apart from biodegradable waste, agricultural residue, cow dung and chicken litter and press mud from sugar factories are also used as feedstock in CBG plants.

Need for CBG in India-

  • India is the third largest importer of crude oil.
  • In 2020-2021, India imported 54 per cent of its natural gas requirement.
  • CBG is a decentralised energy form as it is produced closest to the point of consumption and unlike solar and wind energy, can be produced at all hours of the day.
  • CBG is better than incineration-based waste-to-energy plants that release toxic emissions.
  • The global warming potential of methane is 28 times more than that of carbon dioxide.
  • EROI is a ratio that measures the energy used to produce another energy source against the actual energy generated from that new source.
  • The energy returned on energy invested (EROI) score for large biogas plants is 1.24 to 11.05.

Benefits-

  • If harnessed correctly, municipal solid waste (MSW) and wastewater energy can replace 4053.47 tonnes of India’s diesel consumption per day, the highest consumed transportation fuel in India.
  • If CBG potential from all biomass is taken into account, 50 per cent of the current diesel usage in transport can be replaced.
  • Biomethane is the best transportation option to preserve air quality.
  • CBG provides a very important service of managing our waste and producing organic manure, which can bring back the bio-content in our soil that has been overly laced with chemical fertilisers over the years.
  • The calorific value of Bio-CNG is more than other transportation fuels.

Limitations-

  • High maintenance cost
  • High global warming potential

Methane pollution-

  • Fugitive methane emission from openly dumped waste also leads to landfill fires as happened in Delhi earlier this year.
  • Landfill sites are a source of 20 per cent of the methane emission.
Can Bio-CNG click: A primer on this coming of age tech that can deal with air pollution at 3 levels Environment

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