Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas- 25 times more effective than carbon dioxide at trapping heat over a 100-year period. While it does occur naturally, major human-generated sources include landfills, refineries, oil and gas fields, natural gas infrastructure, dairies and wastewater treatment plants.
Concentrations of methane now exceed 1875 parts per billion,
about 2.5 times as much as was in the atmosphere in the 1850s. Methane
emissions come from diverse sources and sectors of the economy, unevenly
dispersed across the landscape and not well tracked. Methane is also released
from the natural biological process of enteric fermentation which is
fermentation that takes place in the digestive systems of animals. In
particular, ruminant animals that have two stomachs and eat grasses (cattle,
buffalo, sheep, goats, and camels) produce and release methane from the
microbial fermentation that breaks down the grass and hay into soluble products
that can be utilized by the animal. Also, when natural gas and other petroleum
products are used as a fuel incomplete combustion releases traces of methane.
Landfill gas is generated during the natural process of
bacterial decomposition of organic material contained in the trash buried in
the landfill. Landfill gas is approximately forty to sixty percent methane,
with the remainder being mostly carbon dioxide. Landfill gas also contains
varying amounts of nitrogen, oxygen, water vapor, sulfur, and other contaminants.
The report highlights five areas where landfill methane
emissions can be reduced:
- Preventing food waste from being generated along the entire supply chain
- Diverting organic waste from landfills by separating compostable waste. The limited success of recycling programs is a discouraging example of the potential for this solution.
- Rehabilitating old dump sites to install gas capture systems
- Changing landfill design and operation to enhance gas capture systems and minimize the release of methane
- Monitoring and quantifying emissions at landfills and composting facilities to pinpoint emissions sources and validate implemented abatement strategies
RMI, Carbon Mapper, and Integrated Global Greenhouse Gas Information System (IG3IS) released a report recently identifying the potential greenhouse gas reductions achievable through addressing methane emissions from municipal solid waste. Some of the flyover flights have identified landfills as point sources, not however Prince William County Landfill.
PW Landfill has operated for almost 40 years and has more than 7 million tons of trash buried at the landfill. That trash currently generates nearly 3,000 standard cubic feet per minute of landfill gas. In the late 1990’s NEO Prince William (Fortistar) installed a landfill gas collection system and a 1.9 Mega Watt generator tied into the electrical grid. This first stage of the renewable energy development program became operational in November 1998. The landfill electrical generation plant was expanded in November 2013. The facility, still operated by Fortistar, now generates a total of 6.7 MW of electricity. This is enough power for approximately 5,000 homes. NOVEC buys the renewable energy produced at the landfill and resells it to their customers.
Even with the expanded electrical generation there is still
excess landfill gas available. So, the county built a pipeline from the
landfill to the county animal shelter on Bristow Road with connections to
several buildings along the way to provide landfill gas to heat the Fleet
Maintenance Building and provide fuel to the Animal Shelter incinerator. A
connection to the School bus garage was added in 2014 and other buildings are
under consideration. This has allowed the County to replace propane with
landfill gas which is a “Renewable Fuel Resource,” and reduce the energy
footprint of our county.
For More Information read:
R B Jackson, M Saunois, P Bousquet , J G Canadell, B
Poulter, A R Stavert , P Bergamaschi, Y Niwa , A Segers and A
Tsuruta: Increasing anthropogenic methane emissions arise equally from
agricultural and fossil fuel sources, Environ. Res. Lett. 15 (2020)
071002 https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ab9ed2/pdf.
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