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Agenda - 09-02-2008 - 7a
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Agenda - 09-02-2008 - 7a
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Last modified
4/23/2013 10:24:08 AM
Creation date
9/11/2008 10:31:17 AM
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BOCC
Date
9/2/2008
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
7a
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Minutes - 20080902
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2000's\2008
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5. Rentech (U.S.) - coal or coke as feedstock <br />6. Choren Industries (Germany) - <br />7. Syntroleum (U.S.) - used natural gas as feedstock in a demonstration for the <br />U.S. Air Force. <br />In addition, there are a number of research projects funded by the U.S. Department <br />of Energy to use organic materials as feedstocks. These include the Renewable <br />Energy Laboratory and Louisiana State University. <br />The Fischer - Tropsch process is an established technology that has been applied on a <br />large scale in some industrial sectors. Large -scale commercialization is impeded by <br />high capital costs, high operation and maintenance costs, the uncertain and volatile <br />price of crude oil, and environmental concerns. <br />As mentioned in Appendix B, Section 1.3.2, biogas production from wastes is a <br />mature technology with both large- and small -scale units in production worldwide. <br />In India alone, there are over 2 million farm units that produce biogas from animal <br />manures and other wastes. As of 2006, there were thousands of plants in Europe; <br />Germany alone had 3,500 that produced a total of 1,100 MW. The newest of these <br />plants range between 400 and 800 KW, using crops and manure for feedstock. In <br />southern Europe, the production of biogas is primarily from landfills. In 2007, a <br />report on the potential of biogas in Europe by the Oko- Instituts and the Institut fOr <br />Energetik in Leipzig concluded that Germany alone can produce more biogas by 2020 <br />than all of the European Union's (EU) current natural gas imports from Russia. <br />Table 3 -3 shows the production of biogas in Europe by country with the production <br />broken into three categories of feedstock: landfill gas, sewage sludge and other. <br />Summarized by feedstock, this results in 64 percent landfill gas, 18.8 from sewage <br />sludge and 17.2 other. The largest producer of biogas is the United Kingdom, closely <br />followed by Germany. The biogas is approximately 50 percent methane, mixed with <br />carbon dioxide and other gases. <br />GBB /C08027 -01 9 August 15, 2008 <br />
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