The gases arising in decomposition processes in
landfill sites contribute to the greenhouse effect and also present a
substantial health hazard. On the other hand they are often rich in methane and
therefore a potential energy source. In China there is still considerable
potential for generating electricity and heat from landfill gas. An opportunity
to find out in detail about the current situation and future trends in the
Chinese waste-disposal industry is coming up at the environmental trade fair
IFAT CHINA 2008. Between 23 and 25 September international technology
suppliers, service providers and investors will be coming together with experts
and decision-makers from the Chinese environmental sector at this event in Shanghai.According to the United Nations each year 148 million tons of waste ends
up each year in hundreds of landfill sites around China. And, as everywhere else in
the world, here, too, these dumps give off considerable quantities of methane
and carbon dioxide, generated by the bacteriological and chemical decomposition
of the organic content of the waste. Over the years each ton of household waste
can therefore generate 150 to 250 cubic meters of landfill gas.
Without technology landfill gas would pose a considerable danger. The
methane contained in it can combine with the oxygen in the air to create a
combustible, in some cases even explosive mix. If the carbon dioxide collects
in shafts or channels at concentrations of over nine percent people in those
areas can suffocate. Also, the bad-smelling gases from these dumps contain many
trace elements, for example sulfur compounds, that are damaging to health even
in low concentrations.
As well as these dangers posed to human health, untreated gas escaping
from landfill sites in an uncontrolled manner also has an impact on the
climate. Methane is regarded as one of the substances causing the destruction
of the ozone layer; it is 20 times more powerful in its contribution to the
greenhouse effect than carbon dioxide. By treating the gases thermally, i.e.
burning off, the negative effects of these gases can be reduced. A more elegant
solution, however, is to exploit the energy content of the landfill gases to
generate electricity and heat. The heating value of 2.5 cubic meters of
landfill gas is equivalent to that of around one liter of heating oil.
International emissions trading is making it more attractive to exploit
landfill gas: the reduction in greenhouse gases that can be achieved by
generating energy from these gases now has an economic value. The key term here
is CDM, or clean development mechanism. This instrument, agreed at the
international climate conference in Kyoto,
enables industrialized and developing countries to carry out climate-protection
projects together in developing countries. Basically the system involves
working out how much gaseous emissions are produced by a power station, factory
or landfill site, for example, then establishing how much greenhouse gas would
be saved if the landfill gas were exploited to generate heat and electricity. A
company from an industrialized country then invests in and finances the
landfill gas power station and receives certificates for the reduction in
greenhouse gases achieved. With these the investor can either meet the
obligations of its own company at home to reduce a corresponding amount of
greenhouse gases, or sell the certificates to other companies in emissions
trading. The aim of the tool is to prevent as many harmful emissions as
possible, at as low a cost as possible. And at the same time to help emerging
and developing countries to acquire the new technology that they themselves
would not be able to afford.
So far in China
such landfill-gas projects are rare. “Currently there are 680 landfill sites in
China
which have the minimum required system of passive degassing, i.e. by means of
gas wells or collector pipes. By contrast there are only 20 CDM landfill-gas
projects with active gas collection and low pressure – eight of them are
already in operation, three under construction and nine on the drawing board,”
said Heinz-Peter Mang. This German expert, supported by the Centrum für
Internationale Migration und Entwicklung (CIM), works as an advisor on
bio-energy and sustainable sanitary management at the University
of Science and Technology in Beijing.
In summer last year the World Bank also signed its first agreement on
reducing greenhouse gas in China,
in the form of a landfill-gas project. The gas comes from the Shuangkou dump in
China´s important port of Tianjin. Each day
between 800 and 1000 tons of waste are deposited at this modern site.
The Tianjin Clean Energy and Environmental Engineering Company Ltd
(TCEE) will collect the landfill gas arising here via a pipe network and direct
it to a centralized power station where it will be burned. The electricity
generated here will be fed into the northern Chinese grid. TCEE will sell the
equivalent of 635,000 tons of carbon dioxide each year to the Spanish Carbon
Fund managed by the World Bank. Biogas expert Heinz-Peter Mang sees
landfill-gas projects as a good opportunity for China to introduce clean
technologies and pursue sustainable options in waste-management and energy
generation: “The sale of emissions certificates is an important, additional
financing tool, but only in a very few areas can CDM projects be profitably
organized using these measures alone. When it comes to exploiting landfill gas,
however, it´s different. In view of the relatively low investment input,
projects here can indeed be profitable solely via the sale of emissions
certificates.”
About IFAT CHINA IFAT CHINA is a comprehensive trade fair for practical
solutions in the areas of water supply, sewage treatment, waste disposal,
recycling, air pollution control, environmental technology and more
environmentally compatible energy sources in Asia.
The trade fair is international in character and is accompanied by a supporting
program for the trade. IFAT CHINA 2006 had 284 exhibitors from 25 countries and
approx. 10,000 visitors from 66 countries. The 3rd International Trade Fair for
Water, Sewage, Refuse, Recycling and Natural Energy Sources is taking place at
the Shanghai New International Expo Centre (SNIEC) in China from 23 -
25 September 2008.
About Messe München International (MMI) Messe München International (MMI) is one of the world’s leading
trade-fair organizations with approximately 40 trade fairs for investment
goods, consumer goods and new technologies. More than
30,000 exhibitors from more than 100 countries, and over two million visitors
from more than 200 countries take part each year in the trade fairs in Munich. In addition, MMI
organizes trade fairs in Asia, Russia,
the Middle East and South America. With five
foreign affiliated companies in Europe and Asia
as well as 66 foreign representatives covering 89 countries, MMI has a global
network.
Additional information is available at www.ifat-china.com
Contact person for the press Sabine Wagner, Manager Communications, IFAT China
Marketing
& Communications, Investment Goods
Phone: +49
89 / 9 49-20246, Fax: +49 89 / 9
49-20249
E-mail:
sabine.wagner@messe-muenchen.de 06/e/MarComGB1/zi/pet