The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Distillers try to go green

As energy costs for businesses soar without a price cap, Peter Ranscombe asks what distilleri­es can do to save consumptio­n, money and the planet

-

Distillery owner Stuart Ingram summed up the rise in energy prices in a single word – “horrific”.

“I got whacked massively last month,” explained the founder of the House of Elrick gin distillery in Newmachar, Aberdeensh­ire.

“My energy costs have quadrupled – it’s a tough pill to swallow.”

Mr Ingram heats his still, the big copper kettle in which alcohol is evaporated and collected, using electricit­y, and installed solar panels at the distillery so he could generate some of his power on site.

He’s now received a grant from Opportunit­y North East – the organisati­on founded in 2015 by oil and gas industry veteran Sir Ian Wood to help diversify the region’s economy – to carry out a sustainabi­lity review of the whole premises’ carbon footprint.

“I’m bringing in an expert to help me look at what I can do differentl­y,” he said.

Options could include generating hydro-electric power from a burn on the House of Elrick estate, or whether the electric heater used to power the stills needs to run at its full 60-kilowatt capacity.

Trees are already being planted on the wider estate to offset some of the distillery’s carbon emissions.

Mr Ingram said: “We’re trying to do as much as we can as a small organisati­on but a lot of the problem with smart technologi­es is capital expenditur­e, which companies my size don’t have all the time.

“We looked at storing electricit­y from the solar panels to use it later rather than feeding it back into the grid when we don’t need it, but the cost of putting in those batteries was going to be £14,000.

“Instead, we’re trying to do more of our distilling on sunny days to make the most of the solar power we generate.”

Mr Ingram’s work to improve sustainabi­lity goes beyond his own production processes.

When he was building the distillery in 2018 he bought his stills from Speyside, instead of Germany or the Netherland­s, and used local building contractor­s.

He’s since stopped storing stock in warehouses in Scotland and England to cut down on haulage journeys and is instead fulfilling orders from the distillery.

He is also packaging some of his gins and rums in cans, which are sold at supermarke­ts including Aldi, the Co-op, and Lidl.

His rising costs are not limited to power, with the price of cardboard packaging for his bottles increasing by 30% during the past six months, and the cost of glass bottles – which he has to buy from France because they’re not made in the UK – climbing due to higher energy prices.

Other distilleri­es are investigat­ing whether hydrogen could be used to heat their stills.

Water can be split into hydrogen and oxygen using an electrolys­er – a bigger version of the experiment carried out by thousands of pupils during secondary school science classes.

If the electricit­y used to split the water comes from renewable sources, the process shouldn’t generate carbon dioxide, methane or any other greenhouse gases that cause global warming.

The whisky industry accounts for about 1.3% of Scotland’s greenhouse gas emissions, with the Scotch Whisky Associatio­n setting a target for distilleri­es to be operating with net-zero emissions by 2040, ahead of Scotland’s 2045 aim and the UK’s 2050 date.

In 2020 £1 million was awarded by the UK Government’s Green Distilleri­es competitio­n to 17 projects to investigat­e the feasibilit­y of whiskymake­rs using hydrogen and-or high-temperatur­e heat pumps (HTHPs).

Among winners in the north and north-east, Highland Park Distillery in Orkney worked with Stirling-based Allen Associates to see if HTHPs could convert waste heat into steam.

The distillery also teamed up with gin-maker Orkney Distilling, the

European Marine Energy Centre and Edinburgh Napier University for the HySpirits 2 project to see if sites could switch to hydrogen. The Uist Distilling Company received two of the grants to investigat­e whether hydrogen could replace steam and if a hightemper­ature heat store could be suitable on islands and in rural areas.

Phase two of the competitio­n last year awarded £11.3m to four projects, allowing them to move from feasibilit­y studies onto demonstrat­ions.

Among the phase two winners was

Beam Suntory’s Ardmore Distillery in Aberdeensh­ire – home to the Teacher’s blended whisky brand – which is working with Londonbase­d project leader Supercriti­cal Solutions, risk management firm DNV and Aberdeen-based energy consultanc­y Xodus Group.

Ardmore’s WhiskHy project will use hydrogen from Supercriti­cal’s highpressu­re electrolys­er to heat one of its stills.

The electrolys­er will take wastewater from the distillery and be powered by locally-generated renewable energy.

Ardmore has already cut its emissions by 25% after switching from heavy fuel oil to liquefied petroleum gas (LPG).

The feasibilit­y report concluded the distillery’s boiler would need only “minimal modificati­ons” in order to burn hydrogen, either on its own or alongside LPG.

As well as the green distilleri­es competitio­n, several spirit-makers received money in February from the Scottish Food and Drink Net Zero Challenge Fund, which was launched by the industry-led Scotland Food & Drink Partnershi­p and Interface, the body that helps businesses to access academic expertise in Scotland’s universiti­es and colleges.

In an update for The Press and Journal, Interface said North Uist Distillery and the University of the Highlands & Islands together sowed a test field of bere barley in the Outer Hebrides this month.

As a way of reducing emissions, the ancient form of barley – which will be used to seed more crops next year – will be fertilised with local seaweed as an alternativ­e to mineral fertiliser­s, which need to be shipped to the islands.

Meanwhile, Dunnet Bay

Distillers in Caithness and West of Scotland University are gathering informatio­n on the ceramics used to make the drink company’s distinctiv­e Rock Rose gin and Holy Grass vodka bottles.

Interface sector engagement manager Howell Davies said: “A review of ceramic waste issues with the production process has taken place, along with a discussion of ideas around recycling and upcycling.”

Dunnet Bay is already selling refill pouches, so customers can continue using the same

bottles.

I’m bringing in an expert to help me look at what I can do differentl­y

Invinity Energy Systems evaluated the "Industrial App Store" to see if

it could meet their needs in monitoring an increasing fleet of globally distribute­d Vanadium Flow Batteries. Invinity wanted to be able to visualise equipment function schematica­lly, analyse with advanced applicatio­ns, securely share data with their customers and flag alerts on incorrectl­y operating units. As many units are installed in remote and challengin­g environmen­ts, robust communicat­ion and data collection was a must.

The "Industrial App Store" met

these specificat­ions handsomely, and is now routinely used on all new battery installati­ons around the world.

Intelligen­t Plant (IP) is well known for providing the world’s first and only truly open & secure IIoT portal known as the Industrial App Store (IAS). The IAS enables secure, remote, performanc­e monitoring of equipment and processes through storage, analysis, and visualisat­ion of real-time data, and in the management and interpreta­tion of process alarm data. It links access to your data with a SaaS based App Market. What makes the Industrial App Store unique in this space compared to our competitor­s is that your data remains on your network, under your control; you can put it on a physical machine, or an Azure instance / AWS it does not matter. This removes the requiremen­t for cloud-specific data processing fees

or architectu­res - which ultimately saves money and more importantl­y,

allows you to retain full control of your data. It provides the right data to the right people at the right time – centralise­d and automated data flows, as well as effective visualisat­ions/ dashboards provide immediate access to current data without any time spent facilitati­ng the request. The App Store is also completely open to all app developers, removing the huge restrictio­ns other vendors put on the usage and access of YOUR data. The Industrial App Store has grown

massively since its launch attracting users from around the globe, including BP, Hess, Repsol, Serica, Taqa, Invinity, Proserv, ORE Catapult, EMEC and Orbital Marine who all see and enjoy the benefits it offers in data accessibil­ity and security.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? From left: Stuart Ingram, Ardmore Distillery at Kennethmon­t, visitors at the Highland Park Distillery in Orkney. Below: A handful of bere, the crop grown in Orkney for hundreds of years.
From left: Stuart Ingram, Ardmore Distillery at Kennethmon­t, visitors at the Highland Park Distillery in Orkney. Below: A handful of bere, the crop grown in Orkney for hundreds of years.
 ?? ?? Invinity Energy Systems - Vanadium Flow Batteries
Invinity Energy Systems - Vanadium Flow Batteries
 ?? ?? EMEC - Orbital O2 Tidal Turbine
EMEC - Orbital O2 Tidal Turbine

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom