4.7 Article

Fugitive methane emissions from two agricultural biogas plants

Journal

WASTE MANAGEMENT
Volume 151, Issue -, Pages 123-130

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2022.07.033

Keywords

Agricultural biogas; Low -carbon fuel; Fugitive methane; Flaring; Digestate storage

Funding

  1. NRCan
  2. AAFC Abase projects

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This study quantified the fugitive methane losses from two biogas facilities over one year and found that digestate storage was the main source of losses. Leakage and flaring also contributed to the overall methane losses. Facility B had higher losses, but the leakage emissions were reduced after dome membrane repair. Minimizing losses from digestate storage and avoiding leakage during abnormal operation are crucial for biogas to have a positive impact on greenhouse gas emissions.
This study quantified fugitive methane (CH4) losses from multiple sources (open digestate storages, digesters and flare) at two biogas facilities over one year, providing a much needed dataset integrating all major loss pathways and changes over time. Losses of CH4 from Facility A were primarily from digestate storage (5.8% of biogas CH4), followed by leakage/venting (5.5%) and flaring (0.2%). At Facility B, losses from digestate storage were higher (10.7%) due to shorter hydraulic retention time and lack of a screwpress. Fugitive emissions from leakage were initially 3.8% but were reduced to 0.6% after the dome membrane was repaired at Facility B. For biogas to have a positive impact on greenhouse gas emissions and provide a low-carbon fuel, it is important to minimize fugitive losses from digestate storage and avoid leakage during abnormal operation (leakage, roof failure).

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