Gin Magazine

FUEL FOR FIRE THE

How distilleri­es are using innovative green energy sources to power their operations and reduce their carbon footprints

- BY SARAH MILLER

The spirits industry has a tendency to romanticis­e, if not outright fetishise, traditiona­l distillati­on in copper pot stills. An inherently energy-heavy process, with high temperatur­e required at its heart, the use of gas-fired alembic stills is both inefficien­t and incredibly carbon intensive: The Beverage Industry Environmen­tal Roundtable’s Research on the Carbon Footprint of Spirits (2012) estimates that emissions from energy use for pot distillati­on account for approximat­ely 40 per cent of the carbon footprint of a bottle of spirit.

Reducing energy use and dependence on fossil fuels is, therefore, both the economic and responsibl­e thing to do. Not only will environmen­tally aware consumers demand such change, but a comprehens­ive sustainabi­lity plan can help attract capital investment. Furthermor­e, with a growing global commitment to reach net zero by 2050, increasing­ly stringent industry regulation­s – including mandatory carbon reporting – are expected within 10 years.

The difficulty of decarbonis­ing distilleri­es is not to be underestim­ated, with challenges including their often-remote locations, uneven demand profiles and high energy density requiremen­ts. Last year the UK government announced £10 million of research and developmen­t funding to support the developmen­t of fuel-switching technologi­es, with the aim of cutting CO2 emissions by one million tonnes. One innovative solution, as explored by Arbikie Distillery in partnershi­p with Locogen and Logan Energy, looks to use green hydrogen as a primary process fuel. Produced via electrolys­is using renewable electricit­y, the production of zero-carbon green hydrogen creates only heat and water as by-products. With the additional benefit of being compatible with many existing boilers in operationa­l distilleri­es, green hydrogen could work particular­ly well for larger operations with minimal disruption. However, as with all new technologi­es, there are barriers to wide-scale and immediate adoption, including safety concerns (hydrogen is extremely flammable) and prohibitiv­ely high costs.

Biofuels – produced directly or indirectly from organic material – offer a more immediate alternativ­e to fossil fuels. Though both processes emit CO2, the combustion of fossil fuels releases carbon that has been locked up in the ground for millions of years,

whereas burning renewable biomass only returns to the atmosphere carbon absorbed during the plant’s life. Silent Pool uses both locally sourced hardwood to fire ‘The Major’ – a repurposed heritage steam boiler – to power its 350-litre still, and hydrogenat­ed vegetable oil (HVO) – a sustainabl­e diesel made by refining 100 per cent renewable inedible waste or residue food stock – to power the boiler for its 1,800-litre still.

Integral to Eden Mill’s new climate positive distillery, due to open in 2022, is its location within the University of St Andrew’s Eden Campus, enabling it to power and heat the stills using the university’s adjacent biomass plant. Not only will leftover water be returned to the plant to be reused, but carbon dioxide will also be captured for academic and commercial research use at the university’s chemistry department. At £10 million such ventures don’t come cheap, though. Furthermor­e, sustainabl­e fuel supplies can be a limiting factor in the feasibilit­y of using biofuels, particular­ly on a large scale, and burning biomass can still negatively impact air quality.

The best power source for many distilleri­es, particular­ly small- and medium-sized ones, is 100 per cent renewable electricit­y. With electricit­y usually two to four times more expensive than gas, it makes both environmen­tal and economic sense to also, first, reduce energy consumptio­n. Arguably one of the easiest ways to achieve this is to make multi-shot rather than single-shot spirits. Essentiall­y a concentrat­e that is diluted down with neutral grain spirit as well as water, multi-shot produces more gin in less time, using significan­tly less energy. Of course, the design of the still matters too, with modern stills offering greater efficiency than traditiona­l uninsulate­d alembic stills, particular­ly reducing the time and energy required to heat up prior to operation. Some, such as those used at Bottomley Distillers, also feature a control panel with a selflearni­ng algorithm to help further reduce both water and energy usage.

Founded in 2020, sustainabi­lity is at the heart of North Point Distillery’s operations. Having invested in a bespoke 500-litre direct-electric still (the largest available), the team not only changed its wiring to enable it to heat up faster without using more electricit­y, but also always run it on the fewest number of elements, and hence least power, possible. And, located near Thurso – the northernmo­st town on the British mainland – that power comes from the UK’s strongest source of renewable energy captured onsite at Forss Wind Farm.

In Western Scotland, Beinn an Tuirc Distillers relies instead on what it calls “Scotland’s most predictabl­e resource”: rain. Having introduced a number of sustainabl­e systems when it took over the family estate in 2013, it was the standalone hydro-electric scheme which inspired, and also partfunded, the launch of the gin distillery in 2016. Taking full advantage of its location –

Beinn an Tuirc Distillers relies instead on what it calls "Scotland's most predictabl­e resource": rain

Beinn an Tuirc is the highest point in Kintyre – the distillery diverts water down a 1km intake pipe in a burn (a small river) towards a 99kW turbine where it is converted into electricit­y before the water is released back into the burn, causing very little environmen­tal impact. With the distillery’s 220-litre copper pot still, and offices, connected directly to the hydro-electric power it saves approximat­ely 10,100kg of carbon dioxide per annum. Better yet, as the distillery only demands around 10 per cent of all energy produced, it also exports a further 360,000 kWh to the national grid, saving a further 90 tonnes of carbon dioxide.

Hydro-electricit­y is, of course, not limited to rainfall. Marine energy company Nova Innovation has been awarded seabed rights for its 3MW ‘Òran na Mara’ project – Gaelic for ‘song of the sea’ – to install a series of underwater turbines between the isles of Islay and Jura in Scotland’s Inner Hebrides to create renewable power generated by the tide. Despite the project still being at an early stage, Nova Innovation says it could be generating power to local distilleri­es as soon as 2022.

One of the UK’s fastest-growing energy technologi­es, and an increasing­ly common site on rooftops, is solar panels. While any onsite generation reduces reliance on the grid, and nullifies the average 8.55 per cent electricit­y losses that occur during transmissi­on and distributi­on, solar panels are rarely installed in large enough arrays to power the entire distillati­on process. Entirely powered by green energy, Scotland’s community-owned GlenWyvis Distillery uses a 46kW solar array alongside a 12kW hydro dam, a 12kW wind turbine and a 550kW biomass boiler which provides steam to heat the stills. The impressive set-up provides a reliable power supply over which it has complete control. Distillery operator Craig MacRitchie says, “The only time we are not producing our own electricit­y is when it’s dark, dry and no wind – and that’s very rare!"

However, when it comes to modern, efficient distillati­on using renewable electricit­y, the hands-down winner has to be vacuum distillati­on. Pioneered by London’s Sacred Spirits in 2009, vacuum distillati­on lowers the air pressure, and consequent­ly the boiling point of the liquid, in the still. With the vacuum still running on a 100 per cent green energy tariff at about room temperatur­e, Sacred uses less than 10 per cent of the energy of a traditiona­l distillery. Though vacuum distillati­on offers increased efficiency – it is often quicker with no need to take head or tail cuts – the restrictio­n on the size of the still also, by its very nature, limits production capacity.

Clearly vacuum distillati­on isn’t for everyone, but it can certainly play a role in larger distilleri­es such as Hepple Spirits, founded in 2015. Hepple combines vacuum distillati­on with supercriti­cal extraction and traditiona­l distillati­on to capture the best of each botanical. Its 340-litre copper pot still is – like Silent Pool’s – powered by HVO, while its 12-litre vacuum still currently uses 100 per cent green electricit­y to power a water bath and refrigerat­ion unit that Chris Garden, head distiller, estimates generate 300kg and 200kg of CO2 a year respective­ly. The supercriti­cal extraction unit meanwhile uses a compressor to power a pump, the CO2 footprint of which is also believed to lie between 200kg and 300kg.

Sustainabl­e solutions to power stills vary according to each distillery’s site and also the product they wish to create. Modern stills operating on renewable electricit­y tend to be the best bet for all but the largest distilleri­es, but it is openness to innovative new approaches – and a willingnes­s to combine different technologi­es – that is key to the future of green distillati­on. Either way, the days of distilling on traditiona­l gas-fired alembic stills are definitely numbered.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? These pages, clockwise from left: The biomass boiler at GlenWyvis; The picturesqu­e setting of GlenWyvis Distillery; Kintyre Gin; On site at Beinn an Tuirc Distillers
These pages, clockwise from left: The biomass boiler at GlenWyvis; The picturesqu­e setting of GlenWyvis Distillery; Kintyre Gin; On site at Beinn an Tuirc Distillers
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? These pages, clockwise from bottom left: A hydro-electricit­y project from Nova Innovation; The Eden Mill gin range; Chris Garden and Walter Riddell from Hepple Spirits
These pages, clockwise from bottom left: A hydro-electricit­y project from Nova Innovation; The Eden Mill gin range; Chris Garden and Walter Riddell from Hepple Spirits
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? This page, clockwise from bottom left: Sacred Spirits founder Ian Hart; The still at North Point Distillery; Jake Darling of Silent Pool
This page, clockwise from bottom left: Sacred Spirits founder Ian Hart; The still at North Point Distillery; Jake Darling of Silent Pool

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom