http://www.eyeforfuelcells.com/ReportDisplay.asp?ReportID=1032
EyeforFuelCells - Facilitating the commercialisation of Fuel Cell technology
Non-Burning Biogas Power Plant Tested in Kobe
(1/7/2002)

January 7, 2002--On reclaimed land in Kobe, the Environment Ministry 
is testing a state-of-the-art facility that generates electricity 
from kitchen waste with almost no risk of dioxin discharge, noise 
pollution or worsening global warming by carbon dioxide (CO2) 
emissions.

The facility, located on a 2,000-square-meter lot in the southern 
part of Kobe's Port Island began a trial operation last September and 
has drawn attention from municipal governments and businesses across 
Japan. Up to four groups tour the plant daily.

''This facility has demonstrated a new method of future waste 
management,'' said Shoichi Noguchi of the ministry's Global 
Environment Bureau.

Under the system developed by general contractor Kajima Corp. and 
Fuji Electric Co., garbage provided by six large hotels in Kobe is 
fermented in a 9-meter-high tank into ''bio gas,'' which mostly 
consists of methane. The gas is then pumped into a fuel cell after 
toxic substances are extracted. Hydrogen removed through catalysis is 
used to generate electricity from the cell, according to the two 
companies and the ministry.

Environmentally friendly fuel cells produce power through a chemical 
reaction between hydrogen and oxygen in the air, and emit only water 
as a byproduct.

The ministry, which built the facility with 480 million yen earmarked 
under the fiscal 1999 and 2000 budgets, expects it will generate up 
to 2,400 kilowatts of power daily on 6 tons of kitchen waste. The 
output is enough to power 240 households.

It also wants to use surplus electricity to power electric vehicles 
and use excess bio gas in cars powered by compressed natural gas. The 
facility will undergo a three-year trial period and the ministry will 
then consider putting it to practical use.

Devices have been developed in Japan to turn kitchen scraps into 
compost, but most is still usually burned in incinerators. Watery 
garbage requires much fuel for incineration and may emit dioxins if 
burned at low temperatures.

Noguchi said the facility's great advantage is that it does not burn 
waste with oil or other fossil fuels that generate greenhouse gases. 
It is also quiet because there is no burning, he said.

He emphasized the system converts 95% of the waste into power.

''When sorting kitchen refuse, foreign objects such as knives and 
bottles are set aside and burned. Sludge and waste water are also 
generated by the process. Altogether, 5% of the garbage that is put 
into the facility becomes waste,'' Noguchi said.

To promote use of the facility, costs must be reduced and there must 
be a steady supply of kitchen refuse. The ministry will try to 
collect more raw garbage from the six hotels and ask them to provide 
garbage from more restaurants and parties, he said.

Many municipal governments tasked with waste management are 
interested in the new system and if it is simplified and becomes 
available at a lower cost, it can be widely used in urban areas that 
have stable kitchen refuse supplies from commercial facilities, 
Noguchi said.


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor ---------------------~-->
Kwick Pick opens locked car doors,
front doors, drawers, briefcases,
padlocks, and more. On sale now!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/ehaLqB/Fg5DAA/Ey.GAA/9bTolB/TM
---------------------------------------------------------------------~->

Biofuels at Journey to Forever
http://journeytoforever.org/biofuel.html
Biofuel at WebConX
http://www.webconx.com/2000/biofuel/biofuel.htm
List messages are archived at the Info-Archive at NNYTech:
http://archive.nnytech.net/
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 


Reply via email to