Waste to Energy by Advanced Gasification
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- čas přidán 28. 07. 2018
- Contact: Recovered Energy Australia - info@recoveredenergy.com.au
The world's advanced method of converting General Household waste to electrical energy using Vertical Rotary Gasification.
Odour Free
Clean EPA required zero pollution emissions.
Small land footprint - Treat waste in the same locality it is created.
No expensive transport to distant landfill or large Incinerators.
No additional energy to run plant.
All water used is purified and recycled in a continuous water to steam to water loop.
Modern totally enclosed plant suitable for operation in a town or city.
Minimal ash produced through efficient controlled combustion.
Great concepts; hoping to see it commercially deployed in more locations. We’re actively pushing our investors towards impact deals like trash to energy that can make a difference. Hope to see more of these closer to cities and landfills as well!
Agree @joshbois tv - more urgent action is required to establish more gasification projects to divert waste from landfills.
When I first learned of this a few months ago I’ve been starting to push nonstop. There are so few downsides, all of which are shared by other methods of disposable, and so many upsides. I hope more people start to catch on, but so many seem to think it’s just fancy incineration
This technology needs more work to be environmentally successful. The process is so temperamental it requires a lot of traditional fuels like diesel burners to warm up and cool down correctly after plant stability issues
@@cskelton3368 there are 40 plants that have been construction over the past 20 years. This vertical rotary gasifier design does not require diesel or natural gas or other auxillary fuels to operate.
@@cskelton3368 Honestly kind of a midwit take on environmental issues. The most important thing is that you squeeze energy out of materials more than one time. Multi usage.
Look at the energy output and look at the destruction of the waste.
Couldn’t care less if it’s actually profitable. We should be paying to do this service, best way to get rid of rubbish.
@Mac Riggland Hi, my midwit take is from my experience as I work at a gasification energy from waste powerstation. Our support Fuel is diesel and when the plant is not within the required EA temp to burn SRDF we have to burn diesel and lots of it to maintain, warm or cool the plant. So, while these plants on paper look fantastic all the caveats aren't mentioned
@@cskelton3368 So? You think I’m gonna purity spiral like some 17 year old girl?
i love the background music!
Why can'nt I see gasification projects applied to obtaining fuel on an industrial scale. Is it unsustainable?
what is the land requirement and cost of setting up such a plant
the background "music" is annoying AF
at least they know no one will try and Copyright it.
NO ONE wants to say they owned that song!
@@The_General_Zubas For F sake i need it for reasearch i cant focus and plus his voice is boring
@@klaush373 LOL!
We can fix our trash problem!
where i can get the sketchup modelling of that incinerator modelling?
Google or Search on youtube WOOD GASIFIER or plastic gasifier. They explain everything
Too late broski, already on an operation and have $150mm invested already.
Is the energy output sufficient to power the entire process?
A plant processing 200,000 tonnes per annum of household waste will generate around 16MW of electricity that can be exported to the grid. The plant will also generate another 2-3MW to run the operation. It does not require auxillary fuels such as natural gas or diesel due to the design of the vertical gasifier.
What is the name of this plant in CHina?
It's not in China.
Why is this not being talked about any more
Good question Dean, urgent action is required to reduce landfills and this proven waste gasification to energy technology is a viable solution.
Where can I get more information in regards to this technology? I would like to determine the cost of building one of these plants.
There is a company called eqtec who you could look into
Gregory is a serious businessman with multinational corporate and government backing.
FEMA straight up have plans for building one for disaster relief. It could easily be something to work from. Google it and theres a 95 page document to construct one.
@@SD-tj5dh This project is by Recovered Energy Australia - contact info@recoveredenergy.com.au
Cost be build a plant in the US is about $185M.
Approximately how much would a plant (in Southern California) cost to build that would burn up to 40K residents' trash for use to power the city?
@@rachel39321 Thanks I'll take a look when I get a chance to read it. Any quick ballpark figures on if this is even a cost effective solution for smaller to medium size cities or towns?
John - 40k residents would only produce 20k tonnes of waste per annum. This project is by Recovered Energy Australia - contact info@recoveredenergy.com.au
Ask the people that started burning man...
Where is this, What Country....Who is Mike Rudd....is there a website?
Gasification is currently being used in China and is now being comprehensively verified by Recovered Energy Australia through the process required by the EPA. Suggest you check the Australian Website - Recovered Energy Australia.
@@mikerudd1948 THANKS SO MUCH FOR INFO....IT IS BEAUTIFUL AND GIVES ME HOPE
so why arent these plants everywhere?
Landfill is an established very old way of disposing of waste, unfortunately cheap in many cases and also nasty in most cases. The realisation that landfills emit huge amounts of greenhouse gas emissions - particularly methane will bring change. Ask your local government person why they keep sending to landfill and when will they change? There are solutions available.
So, after 30 years of operation - then what?
Then the plant is either renovated or retired
does it work??
Yes, there are 40 plants built since 2005 operating on household waste, medical waste or hazardous waste.
Good on ya mates!! Handling yer rubbish. Now just teach us Yanks up here!
I'm trying to get in touch with you and can't find you anywhere if you want to email me or tel?
This project is by Recovered Energy Australia - contact info@recoveredenergy.com.au
hello what is your contact details for this company .. interested in setting up a plant .. thanks
Hi Sanjay, We shall support you Technically in setting up this plant catering to many other Applications, too. Developed a Demo Unit near Hyderabad, India. Please get in touch. Thanks
This project is by Recovered Energy Australia - contact info@recoveredenergy.com.au
you can write to luis@@t we have a plasma gasification System better than Westinghouse because we developted a System without Argonium Gás , we use a air compressão in the System using Low Amperage.
My name is Luis Carlos Klein and I can provide all Information
Gasification isn't as eco-friendly as proponents claim. There's a gasification plant on the Isle of Wight in the United Kingdom, and it has been known to breach limits for dioxin emissions.
Gasification is a generic name. It is the same as saying that a particular car brakes down occasionally therefore all cars are no good. Good gasification technology that is well designed and fully verified by the EPA authority does not breach dioxide-emissions. One issue is that waste is not a constant known mixture of waste materials, but a random collection, in this case from households general waste bins. The key benefit of good gasification is that it combusts the syngas at extreme high temperatures with inline sensors to monitor and control emissions through the overall process. There are issues with all types of waste. Well designed Gasification technology provides a good overall solution.
It is way better than landfills and ocean pollution.
@@wavargasmolina Better than landfills?
Any plastic in the waste, if you burn it, or if you burn the gases produced from gasification of plastic, will emit carbon dioxide that was locked out of the carbon cycle for millions of years. Most plastics are made from chemicals derived from petroleum, remember.
As for the gases produced from decomposition of waste in a landfill: you can capture that and burn it to generate electricity. Much cleaner than burning plastic, and it's carbon-neutral.
@@petercdowney Most landfills are just large uncontrolled dumping grounds and they contaminate soil/water with leach-ate. Controlling these facilities is much easier.
@@wavargasmolina A landfill is not uncontrolled if it's properly constructed.
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I wish i could invest in this technology and bring it to the pacific rim countries and donate them to the governments to create jobs. This is a no brainer, for continental countries, if we start running out of trash and have to dig up old land fills, wed know we going the right direction.
To advanced and expensive here in Moritania
But could there be made smaller gasifiers it would be gold. The reason I'm on the page spying 😁
@@eriknielsen1849 Perfect for small island locations that have not other option and already installed on one island processing 25t/d. This project is by Recovered Energy Australia - contact info@recoveredenergy.com.au
@@craigeyes8395 thanks
@@eriknielsen1849 Etia group have smaller container-based mobile units for those purposes. www.biogreen-energy.com/containerised-plant-module/
@@kristofferrytterager3072 that is pyrolysis so can't be used for the plastic we have here because it's most pet
CHINESE DOING THIS NOW.
not "advanced" gasification. This is barely a step up from incineration. This is more energy intensive, low recovery, indirect use of the syngas. Indirect systems like this usually give ~500 kW/Tonne waste. Better systems are 1,000kW/Tonne waste. There are much better systems out there than this one.
Hi David, can you list some of the options that you think are better?
How can it be energy intensive? This advanced technology uses the general household waste as the total energy input and uses no additional energy. PLUS these plants use a small land footprint so can be built in the same area as the waste is created by households eliminating transfer stations and very expensive transport costs to out of town landfill sites or large regional incinerators....
Hi David, could you list some suppliers of better waste gasification system ? Thanks
If your country is rich enough (Australia, EU, Canada, USA), you can teach third world nations (Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines) about recycling and how they can make huge money out of it. Then sell them your garbage. PROBLEM SOLVED!
Indonesia and Malaysia are not third world countries. They do have serious waste management problems however and sending them trash from other countries makes no sense at all.
I.D.I.O.T!
This still produces a significant amount of co2 emissions. Majority of combustion engine exhaust is nitrogen too, but we know that's not "clean". I am an engineer and this is my field of expertise, it's disappointing you left out information that is key to whether or not the general public will accept it. This creates as much co2 as incinerating it (in fact more since there is no ash)
hello, I've been looking into this process for sometime now and I would really use your expert advice on some of the things because google and these youtube videos seem to hide some information. How do i get in touch with you
@@emmanuelvinandihmseteka9714 what would you like to know?
Jono, this plant does not use the syngas to combust in an engine. It collects the heat in a boiler and uses the steam to produce electricity in a steam turbine. It clearly shows this in the video, there are no engines shown. Diverting waste from landfill in this gasification process significantly reduces GHG's such as methane. The plant produces slag from inert materials dropped through the gasifier and around 2% flyash collected in the baghouse. There is nothing to hide.
@@emmanuelvinandihmseteka9714 maybe if you were am engineer you would actually know what happens after the gasifier. The syngas undergoes autoignition when air is added, as mentioned the temperature exceeds 1000 degrees centigrade which is significantly higher than its auto ignition temperature. In that part of the process when air is added, the temperature INCREASES. How do you think it increases without combustion lol. If air is added with no combustion the temperature will decrease which is not the case. Also, to gasify the waste it produces CO2 by using the waste as a fuel source. I know it doesn't specifically say ayngas is combustion, but that is exactly what is happening when the air is added via autoignition.
This is my field of expertise, I have designed units like this before. If you want to know more I'll gladly answer any questions
any plastic or synthetic material will contribute fossil carbon to emissions. This is not a clean energy source if plastics and tyres are burnt.
Wrong
The emissions are trapped in the slag and doesn't get into the environment.
"advanced gasification"
lol you mean BURNING?
Erm. No. That's incineration. Incineration is straight up burning. Gasification is just heating up the media in almost airtight conditions to release gas compounds stored in the medium.
Burning involves oxidation, so byproducts are CO2 + H2O, others. Here the result should be "a syn-gas, similar to natural gas" as mentioned.