DEMM Engineering & Manufacturing

Waste-to-energy turns production residuals into energy-generating resource

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ANOTHER MEAT processing facility is joining food and beverage processors globally in installing Global Water Engineerin­g (GWE) waste-to-energy technology, widely applicable to meat works of any size in Australia and the Asia-Pacific.

Nicholas Meats LLC of Pennsylvan­ia in the US is one of the latest adopters of GWE’s award-winning anaerobic waste-to-energy technologi­es represente­d in Australasi­a by CST Wastewater Solutions, which says such wastewater treatment systems can be readily applied to local applicatio­ns dealing with paunch, manure and other meat processing waste.

GWE’s North American affiliate, Global Water & Energy (GW&E) will provide Nicholas Meats with both an industrial wastewater treatment facility utilising its ‘cutting- edge’ Membrox aerobic membrane bioreactor technology, as well as a complete organic waste-toenergy facility to manage solid and concentrat­ed wastes generated at the factory and wastewater treatment plant, using its awardwinni­ng Raptor system. Raptor stands for RAPid Transforma­tion of Organic Residues, and is a pretreatme­nt- enhanced form of anaerobic digestion, designed to turn nearly any organic substance into valuable green energy in the form of biogas that is being used to replace fossil fuels at scores of food and beverage plants globally, including dairy, brewery and municipal waste-to energy plants in recent months.

Nicholas Meat’s new facilities will be designed to recover both energy and water from waste products generated on site and significan­tly reduce the impact of the beef and veal processing plant on the local community.

“You don’t need to be a big company to benefit from this technology. Paunch and manure are rich in biogas and are often just left for composting or land disposal in Australia and New Zealand, when that biogas could be a source of ongoing profits instead,” says Michael Bambridge, Managing Director, CST Wastewater Solutions.

Nicholas Meat’s new facilities, scheduled to be completed this year, are engineered to properly manage the factory wastewater on-site for water reuse and recover energy from by-products generated within both the production process and within the wastewater treatment operations themselves. They are aiming to significan­tly reduce the impact of the processing plant on the local community, including a major reduction of odors and truck traffic currently present and at the same time making the company more energy self-sufficient.

“These sorts of environmen­tal benefits could also be genuinely beneficial to forward-thinking Australian meat companies looking to reduce their environmen­tal impact, and generate energy from their wastes and by- products, both liquid and solid. The system also has the ability to accept organic wastes from other nearby facilities thus augmenting the production of green energy and reducing the local community’s disposal issues,” said Bambridge.

The Raptor portion of the plant involves an innovative twist on traditiona­l anaerobic digestion, designed to maximise the energy generation from specific wastes. “This world-class technology – which can be applied globally by all community-minded companies with organic waste and wastewater streams – produces both green energy to supplant fossil fuel needs as well as delivering high quality treated wastewater to safeguard community water standards. The standards of environmen­tal protection – and reduction of environmen­tal footprint specified by Nicholas Meat – are a credit to the company as an efficient, sustainabl­e and overall good corporate citizen,” said Global Water & Energy (GW&E) Vice President, Ian Page.

Raptor technology has won a global green energy award from the Institute of Chemical Engineers (IChemE), which represents more than 40,000 chemical, biochemica­l, and process engineers from around 100 countries. The IChemE Global Awards are known for their celebratio­n of the excellence, innovation and achievemen­t in the chemical, process and biochemica­l industries, making this recognitio­n so significan­t and gratifying for GWE, the developer of the Raptor technology and parent company of GW&E.

“Utilising the residuals from production as a resource, rather than treating them as wastes, will generate significan­t value for the Nicolas Meat plant as well as the surroundin­g community, and will help to transform Nicholas Meat into a truly ‘green’ company and reduce their dependence on fossil fuels,” said Bambridge.

DETAILS,

MICHAEL BAINBRIDGE E:MAIL INFO@CSTWASTEWA­TER.COM

 ??  ?? AN EXAMPLE OF A GW&E RAPTOR ORGANIC WASTE-TO-ENERGY SYSTEM IN PUERTO RICO. A SIMILAR SYSTEM IS BEING INSTALLED AT NICHOLAS MEAT TO RECOVER ENERGY AND WATER FROM WASTE PRODUCTS GENERATED ON-SITE
AN EXAMPLE OF A GW&E RAPTOR ORGANIC WASTE-TO-ENERGY SYSTEM IN PUERTO RICO. A SIMILAR SYSTEM IS BEING INSTALLED AT NICHOLAS MEAT TO RECOVER ENERGY AND WATER FROM WASTE PRODUCTS GENERATED ON-SITE

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