In preparation for the 13th Cleantech exhibition that will be held this week, the Ladiko Green company presents a facility for utilizing sludge, agricultural waste or food scraps and turning it into biogas
The company "Ladiko Green" of the worldwide BOSCH group will unveil, for the first time in Israel, a facility that utilizes agricultural waste to create biogas at the 13th "Cleantech" annual conference and exhibition for water technologies, renewable energy, green construction, recycling and environmental quality that will be held on June 29-30, 2009 in Gani The exhibition in Tel Aviv. The MTU facility for the utilization of waste (food, cow manure, chicken coops and agricultural waste) is the first of its kind in the world that reaches the customer as one independent unit, which enables easy, fast and economical operation.
Following BOSCH's entry into the field of renewable energies by purchasing the German solar panel manufacturer Ersol, "Ladiko" established the company "Ladiko Green" which will market and sell solutions in the field of renewable energies to integration companies in the field of solar, biogas and wind turbines. Among the first products to be unveiled in Israel as part of the 13th "Cleantech" conference and exhibition, the company will present the MTU, a first-of-its-kind generator that addresses manure, sludge and agricultural waste (including agricultural waste) and turns the manure into bio-gas (engines) intended for production electricity, while reducing ecological damage and protecting the environment. The uniqueness of the facility is its size and ease of operation, which allows it to be placed anywhere and prevents The movement of garbage to central sites, a factor that adds to costs and creates, at times, a sanitary hazard in itself.
MTU is a unique facility, which arrives as one unit to the customer and enables bio-gas production after only a short training and without the need for auxiliary facilities or additional tools. The facility can utilize many types of waste and manure and therefore provides a solution to sludge problems, waste from barns and chicken coops, agricultural waste and even leftover food from hotels and large restaurants. Just for example, in Israel, about fifty thousand tons of sludge are still discharged into the sea or buried in the ground per year, which can be used to produce biogas by the method that will be presented, as mentioned, for the first time in Israel, at the 13th "Cleantech" conference and exhibition at the end of the month at the exhibition grounds.
The 13th Cleantech - the annual international conference and exhibition for water technologies, renewable energy, green construction, recycling and environmental quality will be held this year on June 29 and 30 at the exhibition grounds in Tel Aviv. As part of the exhibition, hundreds of exhibitors from Israel and abroad will present the best developments, inventions and innovations related to environmental issues to the Israeli audience and dozens of delegations from around the world. As part of the conference, professional conferences will be held in collaboration with the Gaon Holdings Group, the Association of Manufacturers and the Association for Green Building.
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Light, it is very useful to burn all the methane and turn it into carbon dioxide for a simple reason - it is used as a greenhouse gas 30 times stronger than the DTP. Therefore, the same amount of carbon dioxide is much less harmful than methane.
Biogas - does it mean methane? It is a greenhouse gas in itself. Isn't it better to bury the waste in the ground, so that only part of the methane is emitted, than to burn the methane and convert it all into carbon dioxide?
What are the percentages of methane emissions from landfills today?
"Just for example, in Israel about fifty thousand tons of sludge are still discharged into the sea or buried in the ground"...
The intention is 50.000 tons per day! and not for a year.