Dear Mr Krishna,
Burning of agricultural wastes and cattle dung for cooking and water heating is 
a common feature in many villages in India and other countries. We must 
aggressively promote anaerobic digestion for biogass and compost through 
affordable technologies and introducing suitable laws for judicious use of 
household and farm wastes including cattle dung and urine. I agree with you 
that anaerobic digestion is the best way for converting waste into wealth. On 
my own farm, I am using all wastes generated by cattle, humans and crops for 
producing biogass and rich compost.
Dr M V PotdarConsulting AgronomistHyderabad, India


Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2012 09:57:01 +0530
From: bmkrish...@gmail.com
To: digestion@lists.bioenergylists.org
Subject: Re: [Digestion] Dung burning vs. anaerobic digestion

Good day Dr. Karve,

While agreeing with you that some Indian villagers are making cow dung/bufalloe 
dung cakes for thermal application, a majority of the villagers have stopped 
making cow dung flakes.  Labour is becoming precarious day by day and the 
daiary industry is finding it extremely difficult to organize their routine 
activities ....forget about making cow dung cakes and selling them.  The amount 
of methane left into the atmosphere should also be taken into consideration.  
Everyone will agree that green or dry grass/leaves contain more amount of 
methane but why should they run around to fetch these.  These units can simply 
recycle the avaialble dung, extract methane  (other wise a menace in rainy 
season), generate power and the cake from the digestate  can be bunt if they 
wish so or it is a rich manure.  The grasses and green leaves matter can be fed 
to animals.


Undoubtedly recycling of cow dung/buffaloe dung via anerobic digestion is the 
best way.  It serves more than one purpose.

Regards,

Krishna
India.


On Thu, Nov 15, 2012 at 6:13 AM, Anand Karve <adka...@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Mr. Ward,
Thanks a lot for making us aware of the situation in Denmark. I agree with you 
that situations differ from country to country and that one should do what is 
best suited to one's needs and also what the environment allows. Please 
remember that the posting that I reacted to refered specifically to cow dung 
and its author complained about extremely low biogas yield. My experience is 
mainly from India. In my posting I specifically refered to dung of ruminents, 
i.e. bovine cattle and water buffalo. In India, these animals mainly graze and 
they eat mainly grass, which is dry except for the rainy season. The dung of 
such animals has very little digestible matter in it. Excreta of poultry and 
pigs have much more digestible matter than those of ruminents.   In India, dung 
cakes are made only from dung of cattle. They are sun-dried. You must be aware 
of the fact that except for Muslims and Cristians, dead bodies are cremated in 
India. There is a big market in India for dung cakes as fuel for creamtion of 
dead bodies. Compressing agricultural waste into fuel briquettes (as boiler 
fuel) has emerged as a big Industry in India. Dung can also serve as boiler 
fuel.  People are even looking at filter presses, which would squeeze the water 
out of dung, so the solids can be coverted into burnable briquettes.


Yours
A.D.Karve
 
On Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 2:35 PM, Alastair James Ward <alastair.w...@agrsci.dk> 
wrote:




Dear A.D. Karve,
 
I disagree that manure only consists of lignin, mucus and microorganisms. There 
is a lot of digestible but undigested protein, fat and carbohydrate in manure, 
not to mention a high concentration of fatty acids which are just one or two 
steps in the biological pathway away from methane production. It is not 
disputed that plant material usually produces more biogas than manure, but I 
think that you have to stand back and consider what factors are most important 
to the very varied users of this list. I live in northern Europe in a country 
with a high animal density. It has been calculated that if we could collect all 
manure produced, all organic wastes available and use all non-food producing 
land for energy crop production and put it all into biogas plants, we would 
still not make a very large impact on the national energy requirement (sorry 
but I forget the exact figures). However, we view anaerobic digestion as a 
method of treating wastes, with the recycling of nitrogen and phosphorous being 
of great importance. The fact that we can produce energy is a nice bonus that 
(hopefully) makes the whole process financially feasible. Burning manure is not 
a realistic option here. As an example, we produce in excess of 20 million 
fattening pigs every year, in a country of less than 6 million people. As a 
result, we have a lot of wet manure to deal with and anaerobic digestion is 
widely viewed as the best available technology to do so. Pig manure has a low 
dry matter content so the energy input necessary for drying, not to mention 
space to do so and any other issues regarding odour emissions etc makes the 
drying and burning of wet manures impractical. We also want to keep the N to 
put back into the soil and thus reduce the need for artificial fertiliser and 
the non-degradable carbohydrates in digestate are useful in maintaining soil 
carbon levels.


As I understand, the original post was not from a northern European country but 
there are still many advantages to anaerobically digesting manure in warmer 
climates. Biogas is certainly a cleaner and more flexible fuel than dry 
material for burning, the fact that one can quite easily run lights and a small 
generator on biogas being major advantages. I came across a paper a couple of 
years ago that suggested the increased use of AD in preference to burning of 
organic material could be linked to an improvement in the health of people in 
rural Indian communities, specifically eye problems due to smoke as I remember.


Please, consider the motives of the people posting on this list before you tell 
us that we are wasting our time digesting manure. If Kyle has manure available 
I suggest he continues to use it in his digester, the low yield can be 
compensated for by having a large supply that is easily available. If he has 
any plant wastes available then certainly put these in as well to boost yield, 
but I would not recommend actively collecting large amounts of biomass from the 
surrounding area, the time and energy used to do so may negate the gain. 


 
Med venlig hilsen 




Alastair James Ward


Post doc.

Inst. for Ingeniørvidenskab
Aarhus Universitet


Blichers Allé 20, Postboks 50
8830 Tjele
 




Tlf.: 8715 7645
Mobil: 4112 2494
Email: alastair.w...@agrsci.dk




Tlf.: 8715 6000
Web: www.agrsci.au.dk





-- 
***
Dr. A.D. Karve
Trustee & Founder President, Appropriate Rural Technology Institute (ARTI)





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