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JFS Weekly
1 - 7 May. 2018
 
Policy / Systems / Technology

New Method for Generating Power and Heat from Weeds, and Potential Agricultural Uses


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Image by Onoatsushi Some Rights Reserved.

A new power generation method using weeds as fuel has been developed in Japan. In this method, methane generated from weeds directly operates a gas engine to generate power. Methane has a high global warming potential and is easily generated, even from rice straw left in rice paddies. This weed-fueled generation method is expected to contribute to the effective use of methane.

The Center for Innovative & Sustainable Society Creation of Meijo University in Aichi Prefecture announced on January 19, 2018, that they succeeded in power generation using weed-derived methane, which can directly fuel a gas engine.

The first part of the method is as follows: mow weeds, mixed them with soil, submerge the mixture and coat it with a sheet in order to maintain oxygen-free conditions, under which microbial fermentation is able to generate methane gas. The next process is to collect methane gas through the recovery system, directly put it to a gas engine, and generate power. The generated power and the exhaust heat from the generation process can be used to provide hot water (co-generation system), which is useful for agricultural applications such as supplying hot water to green houses.

Under anaerobic conditions, such as in rice paddy soil, methane, a potent greenhouse gas, is generated naturally as organic matter like rice straw is decomposed by microbes. Concerned by this problem, Meijo University's Faculty of Agriculture started a demonstrative investigation in 2010 to develop a method to utilize the methane generated from rice straw left in rice paddies. They wanted to utilize the methane as a locally produced energy source for local consumption, aiming at practical uses.

This new method is known as the GET system, referring to an innovative resource-cycling and energy-creating agricultural system. The G in GET refers to methane gas, the E refers to energy and T refers to tambo (rice paddy in Japanese), and the term GET also reflects the idea of "getting energy via methane gas from tambo." This project was designated by Aichi Prefecture in fiscal 2016 as experimental research conducted in the Aichi New Energy Research Area and its operation was successful.

Meijo University has been working on a project to develop an infrastructure-less system to generate renewable energy of a "local production for local consumption" type, and to put the system into practice. The newly developed method is a part of this project. Professors and researchers of the Faculty of Agriculture and the Faculty of Science and Technology conducted a demonstration of the power generation method before the press and ordinary visitors in January 2018, at the New Energy Research Area at "Knowledge Hub Aichi" (straddles the cities of Toyota and Seto in Aichi Pref.)

Their demonstration of this biomass energy-generating process also convinced the audience that it effectively utilizes waste weeds and unused spaces. They brought in weeds mowed from river banks in Seto in October 2017, submerged them, and generated methane at the site. Using a household-use gas engine fueled by methane, they succeeded in generating enough power to light up 10 bulbs and operate an 800-Watt electric stove. In addition, they generated more power using methane generated from rice straw harvested at a university-affiliated farm and were able to light up a desk lamp, turn on a television, and running a personal computer using the electricity produced.

Source: Smart Japan (in Japanese)

Civil Society

Meguro City to Support Renewable Energy Business of Sister City Kesennuma by Purchasing FIT Electricity Generated from Forest Thinnings


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Image by rfduck Some Rights Reserved.

Meguro City (Tokyo) announced on December 25, 2017, that it will purchase woody biomass electricity generated under Japan's feed-in-tariff (FIT) program from its sister city Kesennuma (Miyagi Prefecture). Meguro will start purchasing the electricity from April of this year and use it to power 30 public facilities, including elderly care facilities and elementary and junior high schools.

Meguro City and Kesennuma City became sister cities in 2010 after residents of the two cities bonded through a networking event in 1996. Kesennuma City has long been supplying Pacific saury, a type of fish and local specialty, to the Meguro Sanma festival, named after the classic Rakugo (Japanese comic storytelling) "Meguro no Sanma," which is set in Meguro City. After the 2011 Tohoku Earthquake, the two cities concluded a pact of support in the event of a disaster involving either town, and Meguro City has since been carrying out fundraising activities.

The electricity to be purchased will be generated by Kesennuma Regional Energy Development Company, which utilizes wood thinned from forests as fuel, and sold under the FIT program. The company was founded in the year following the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami, and aims to revitalize the local economy by supporting sustainable forestry and operating a renewable energy business.

Electricity from Kesennuma to Meguro City will be supplied by Miyama Smart Energy Co., headquartered in Fukuoka Prefecture. The company, whose main proprietor is the local government of Miyama City, sells electricity as a retailer.

As for recipients of the electricity, Meguro City has chosen facilities associated with social exchange with Kesennuma City, such as venues where the Pacific Saury Festival and overnight nature-experience classrooms are held. Its aim is to develop friendly relations with Kesennuma and support the city's reconstruction by utilizing its renewable energy.

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