Weltec Biopower announces two new contracts

The projects are located in England and Northern Ireland.


 In view of the ongoing debate about a new feed-in tariff (FIT) system, the development of renewable energies in the U.K. is becoming ever more challenging. Thus, most anaerobic digestion plants are currently implemented by experienced companies. After all, quick planning and construction are a must in order to benefit from the calculated FIT.

Against this backdrop, the plant manufacturer Weltec Biopower U.K. Ltd., from Stoneleigh, Warwickshire, has reported the placement of orders for two new agricultural biogas plant projects in England and Northern Ireland. 

Weltec is currently building a 500-kW plant for Stephen Carson's agricultural enterprise near Strabane, Northern Ireland. The plant's two stainless-steel digesters (3,573 m³ and 4,903 m³) will be fed with 24,500 t of cattle manure, whole plant silage, dry chicken dung, grass silage, sugar beets and small quantities of maize. The project is progressing smoothly, and the plant is set to go live and feed in power as early as summer 2016.
 
Low Farm in Sherburn, England, also decided to have its 500-kW biogas project built with Weltec technology. The company constructed the plant, based on a 3,573-m³ stainless-steel digester, achieving G59 in September 2015, despite only starting work on site in the beginning of July 2015, according to the company. The plant has been online since September 2015, producing power and heat from pig manure, dry chicken dung, beets and some maize silage. 
 
In both plants, the upstream MULTIMix input system ensures pre-treatment of the substrates. In this way, the operators can make use of inexpensive feedstock, such as manure and grass. The surface area of the input substances is enlarged through effective shredding in order to optimize substrate/bacteria contact and boost the methane yield. The MULTIMix unit also removes stones from the feedstocks, reduces the likelihood of layering within the digester and significantly reduces the energy required for digester mixing. The MULTIMix thus plays a key role in ensuring the feasibility of the plant.