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Waste-to-Energy Gasifier to Power Up in Tennessee

The waste-to-energy technology will cleanly convert up to 64 tons per day of blended waste wood, scrap tires and sewer sludge into a fuel gas that will generate up to 300 kilowatts of electricity.

(TNS) March 5 — PHG Energy and the Lebanon city officials recently signed a contract that will provide an environmentally sustainable method of waste disposal and produce green power in the process.

The waste-to-energy technology, which will go online early next year, is a downdraft gasification plant that will cleanly convert up to 64 tons per day of blended waste wood, scrap tires and sewer sludge into a fuel gas that will generate up to 300 kilowatts of electricity.

The generation of this power will provide the plant’s internal power needs as well as contribute electricity to the wastewater treatment plant where it will be located.

“This is not incineration or burning,” Lebanon Mayor Philip Craighead said.

“There is no smoke or odor. The feedstock material is broken down at very high temperatures in a sealed vessel, and about 95 percent of what goes into the gasifier comes out as the fuel gas,” he said.

Craighead also said the remaining 5 percent to 10 percent of material exiting the gasifier is a high-carbon biochar that can be recycled or sold for agricultural or industrial uses.

PHGE President Tom Stanzione said the Lebanon project would deploy what his company believes is the world’s largest downdraft gasifier.

“This is the same basic technology we utilized in all our previous designs, and we have upgraded capacity and power density to accomplish a lot more gasification in what is not a lot more space,” Stanzione said. 

The Lebanon project marks another milestone for PHGE in the area of clean waste disposal and sustainable energy production. To date, PHGE has:

• Installed 13 commercial gasifiers in both industrial and municipal settings, and logged nearly 45,000 hours in production time.

• Acquired multiple intellectual property assets and a municipal gasification plant from Florida-based MaxWest Environmental Systems in Jan. 2015.

• Demonstrated its ability to produce renewable electricity, 1 MW from a Caterpillar generator, from scrap wood chips at its test facility in Gleason, Tennessee, and sold electricity back to the grid as a part of the TVA Generation Partners Program.

• Collaborated with GE Power and Water to develop a combination of technologies to create power with the use of GE’s Clean Cycle heat-to-power generator.

• Consolidated the company’s operations by purchasing the intellectual property of Associated Physics of America and bringing its scientific and production personnel on board with PHGE.

• Commissioned new integrated technology at a waste-to-energy plant in Covington.

• Obtained five new patents on the company’s downdraft gasification technology.
The Large Frame gasifier, as the company refers to it, has vetted through a rigorous testing process for more than two years at PHGE’s research facility. A standard PHGE gasifier can convert up to 12 tons of feedstock per day to fuel gas, while the Lebanon model will process up to 64 tons per day without substantially increasing the footprint of the plant.

The plant is projected to keep more 8,000 tons of material out of landfills each year –the equivalent of a line of trucks more than 4 miles long. Carbon dioxide emissions will be reduced as well, keeping more than 2,500 tons out of the atmosphere each year.

According to the Environmental Protection Agency, the reduction equates to the carbon dioxide produced annually to provide electricity to 312 homes, or the annual Greenhouse Gas Emissions from more than 450 passenger vehicles.

Funding of the $3.5 million capital cost was obtained through a federal program that awards bond subsidies to local projects that conserve energy. Those Qualified Energy Conservation Bonds are allocated through the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation and repay communities about 70 percent of interest expense.

The Lebanon project will mark the 14th gasifier installation for PHGE. The company’s first municipal installation was commissioned in Covington in 2013. Prior deployments of the thermo chemical process were for industrial brick manufacturing clients to replace natural gas usage by cleanly converting wood waste to what is called producer gas or synthetic gas.

Craighead said that the city is viewing this installation as a first stage in a larger plan to convert the city’s household and commercial garbage to energy in the future.

“We see keeping our garbage out of the landfill and using it to make energy as major goals for Lebanon in coming years,” he said. “This is a problem that is coming straight at all of us, and we are going to make sure our city is ready with answers. One of our primary criteria is that the solutions we want will have to make good financial sense along the way.”
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