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Livestock manure to natural gas conversion ready on a large scale in Albany

Submitted photograph
Submitted photograph
>A huge project to convert livestock manure to Renewable Natural Gas is about ready to deliver.

A special event will mark the completion of this significant portion of the $120 Million initiative involving Roeslein Alternative Energy and Smithfield Hog Production operations in Albany Missouri.

Dignitaries in livestock agriculture and energy production will gather August 24 to see the organizers’ progress. Organizers of the event say that due to the nature of the project site, a completed Bio Security screening form is required for anyone attending.

The project’s focus is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, produce RNG, eliminate rainfall effects of treatment systems and generate additional jobs for the surrounding community.

Officials say impermeable synthetic covers are now installed on 41 of the 88 existing manure lagoons at nine Smithfield farms in Northern Missouri, capturing methane from one of the largest concentrations of finishing hogs in the Midwest. The covers turn the lagoons into anaerobic digesters where as an interim step the resulting biogas has been flared.

Phase II of the project involved installation of equipment to remove impurities from the biogas to create pipeline-quality RNG. As of July 1, RNG from the anaerobic digestion of hog manure has been injected into the national pipeline using an interconnect that has been installed at Ruckman Farm. Duke Energy in North Carolina has agreed to purchase a portion of the RNG to help meet clean energy requirements for power generation.

When the project is totally complete several hundred million cubic feet of RNG will be available for similar transmission each year.

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