I found this article in a magazine I read.  It appears the answer to manure 
disposal has been demonstrated complete with the final products of diesel fuel 
and char.


There are no cost figures offered in this article so I suspect it is a pretty 
basic research experiment rather than a production project.


Art Krenzel

California dairy turns manure into renewable diesel

[Steve & Bruce - Sulfur Free Diesel]

An 1,100-cow dairy in southern California became the first-ever operation in 
the world known to produce no-sulfur renewable diesel products from manure on a 
livestock facility in late April.

The milestone is the culmination of three years of collaboration between Scott 
Brothers Dairy in San Jacinto, California, and Ag Waste Solutions (AWS), a 
privately held company that designed the farm’s manure processing system.

“To make it to the top of the hill is a euphoric moment,” dairyman Bruce Scott 
says.

Steve McCorkle, founder and CEO of AWS, announced the partnership’s achievement 
on Facebook on April 27, 2015. The company claims its technology is the “future 
of sustainable farming.”

“We have proven that we can complete the circle of energy for individual farms 
while creating profit centers from manure, enabling farmers to exceed 
regulatory requirements and truly control their own destiny,” McCorkle said in 
a statement.

Scott says he is most proud to have produced a “deliverable” for the California 
Energy Commission, which helped fund the project. As far as he understands, the 
commission has no other no-sulfur diesel projects dealing with this type of 
waste stream, so he is pleased to have “crossed the finish line” by submitting 
a final report. The next step for the system is to prove it can operate 
continuously and thus be a commercially viable option for other agricultural 
operations.

“I didn’t expect to win over favor on this project quickly. But I’ve firmly 
believed in the direction of this project,” Scott says. “The tunnel may have 
gotten longer, but the light at the end of it has always stayed visible in my 
mind. I still believe it’s the most viable technology to get rid of a waste 
stream and produce something that’s value-added at the same time.”

Processing manure into renewable diesel products is just one of the system’s 
manure processing capabilities.

The dairy’s multi-stage system first separates high-BTU manure solids from the 
dairy’s liquid manure effluent. McCorkle says the first stage removes 98 
percent of the total suspended solids and 40 percent of the dissolved solids, 
making good irrigation water for most farms.

The extracted water is further purified at Scott Brothers Dairy to remove the 
other 2 percent of suspended solids and the remaining dissolved solids, making 
the water potable. (This step was to satisfy manure application requirements 
that were specific to the dairy’s regional regulatory agency. See this 
Progressive Dairyman Feb. 7, 2014 
article<http://www.progressivedairy.com/features/producers/11775-dairy-prepares-to-turn-manure-into-renewable-diesel>
 for more background about dairy’s unique permitting situation.)

The dairy’s manure solids are then fed to a pyrolysis gasifier. The gas 
production module then thermochemically decomposes the manure solids in the 
absence of air to produce syngas. The gas is then scrubbed of impurities and 
compressed for storage.

Using a Fischer-Tropsch process, the hydrogen and carbon in the gas is then 
converted in the system’s final stage into no-sulfur renewable diesel products. 
The Fischer-Tropsch process had been used to convert other feedstocks to 
renewable diesel but until recently was never proven to work with manure, let 
alone on a farm.

Perhaps more importantly than producing diesel, the process also produces a 
refined wax product in a controllable diesel-to-wax ratio. McCorkle says the 
wax product’s market value is three times that of the renewable diesel and can 
be further processed or blended off-site with other petroleum products, such as 
jet fuel or kerosene.

“We exceeded our own expectations on the first pass,” McCorkle says. “We were 
able to control the types and factions of liquids and waxes created. And we 
were able to attain the optimal ratio of liquids and waxes. This satisfies our 
business model of making enough diesel fuel for farm use and selling the wax 
products off-farm to create additional profit centers from manure.”

The system on Scott Brothers Dairy that produces renewable diesel products was 
built at pilot-project scale, meaning it is not commercially sized nor 
automated enough in order to operate 24-7 with minimal manpower.

If the dairy had an adequately sized liquid fuels production module that ran 
continuously, it could produce at least 1 gallon of diesel fuel from three 
cows’ manure for a day. Right now the system can convert only one-eighth of the 
dairy’s gasified manure per day and has not yet been automated to run 
continuously.

The first production run of renewable diesel products was evaluated in an 
on-site lab as well as sent to an external lab for validation. Future 
production runs will be tested to validate the fuel is consistently comparable, 
or superior, to other diesel fuels. Initial tests have shown the fuel has very 
similar characteristics to pump diesel but without detectable levels of sulfur. 
Even ultra low-sulfur pump diesel contains up to 15 ppm of sulfur.

When asked if it passed the sniff test and whether he would put it in his own 
tractor, Scott says: “No question about it.”

McCorkle suggests the next steps toward a commercially viable, 24-7 system 
require more funding to upsize the liquid fuels production module in order to 
match the size of the rest of the system and to demonstrate that the system can 
run continuously and more automatically with predictable results and with 
minimal personnel.

McCorkle is optimistic both goals can be achieved. For now, his countenance 
glows over the petrochemical milestone he and the dairy have achieved almost 
entirely by themselves.

“We didn’t achieve these results in a large, complex refinery with tens of 
engineers, chemists and scientists. We achieved these results with only a 
handful of people working in a remote farm environment,” McCorkle says.

Article Credit - Progressive Dairy 
(www.progressivedairy.com)<http://www.progressivedairy.com/features/producers/13532-california-dairy-turns-manure-into-renewable-diesel>

The work was done by Stephen McCorkle, Agricultural Waste Solutions, Inc, 
Westlake Village, CA 91261

Their telephone number is 805-551-0116



















_______________________________________________
Gasification mailing list

to Send a Message to the list, use the email address
[email protected]

to UNSUBSCRIBE or Change your List Settings use the web page
http://lists.bioenergylists.org/mailman/listinfo/gasification_lists.bioenergylists.org

for more Gasifiers,  News and Information see our web site:
http://gasifiers.bioenergylists.org/

Reply via email to