|
|
||
|
|
China biogas project turns waste into energy
Animal manure is a source of methane, the main component of natural gas and a potent greenhouse gas when released to the atmosphere. But methane can also be captured and used as a source of clean, renewable and affordable energy. An IFAD-supported project in China provided about 30,000 poor households with nearly 23,000 ‘biodigester’ tanks for biogas production. As a result, methane emissions dropped, incomes rose and household sanitation and health improved. Biogas is a fuel produced during the anaerobic digestion of agricultural and animal waste. With biogas technology, waste is stored in specially constructed containers, known as a biodigester or biogas plant. Besides producing fuel, biogas digesters have the added benefit of producing a high-nutrient fertilizer and encouraging better sanitation on farms.
China has successfully promoted the use of biogas as a source of household energy since the 1980s. In the 1990s China’s biogas strategy was extended to remote communities in west Guangxi, where wood for fuel was in short supply and rural electricity was not available. In 2002 the strategy was a key component of a six-year IFAD-funded project to improve and sustain the livelihoods of poor rural people while rebuilding and conserving natural resources. Improving health, saving money “We used to cook with wood,” says Liu Chun Xian, a farmer involved in the project. “The smoke made my eyes tear and burn and I always coughed. The children too were often sick and had to go to the clinic, which was expensive. Now that we’re cooking with biogas, things are much better.” Each household involved in the project builds its own plant to channel waste from the domestic toilet and nearby shelters for animals, usually pigs, into a sealed tank. The waste ferments and is naturally converted into gas and compost. In addition to producing energy, the project has resulted in better sanitary conditions in the home. The poorest households, which had only one pig, built small units that could produce enough gas to provide lighting in the evening. Households with two or more pigs built larger units that could produce gas for cooking as well as for lighting. Huge payoffs lead to high adoption rate
In the last five years, with more time to spend improving crops, farmers in Fada have increased tea production from 400 kilograms to 2,500 kilograms a day. Average income in the village has quadrupled to just over US$1 per day. This is significant in a country where the poverty line is 26 US cents per day. Looking towards a more viable future Through the use of biogas, people’s living conditions and the environment have improved, forests are protected and the labour force has more time for agricultural production. A large amount of straw, which was previously burned, is now put into biogas tanks to ferment. This further reduces air pollution from smoke and helps produce high-quality organic fertilizer. The lives of women, in particular, have been transformed by the project. Since Liu Chun Xian’s family began producing biogas on their farm, she no longer spends three hours a day collecting wood for cooking. Instead, she has taken training that has helped her improve the family’s tea farm, which now generates more money. Thousands of poor farmers across the province have done the same, contributing to a drop in rural poverty.
Source: IFAD
|
Hot links
Contact Information
Thomas Rath
|