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BioHiTech America collaborates to convert food waste to energy

BioHiTech Global Inc., a green technology company that provides an innovative data-driven solution for food waste disposal, announced that its subsidiary, BioHiTech America, has partnered with Natural Systems Utilities, Ridgewood Green RME and the village of Ridgewood, New Jersey, to test a process that will allow BioHiTech's Eco-Safe Digester to digest, tank, and deliver the effluent from its Eco-Safe Digesters to anaerobic digestion (AD) facilities anywhere in the world.

BioHiTech's Eco-Safe Digester utilizes an aerobic digestion process to convert food waste to grey water, also referred to as effluent. Typically the effluent is discharged safely into the sewage system and individual wastewater treatment facilities to treat it with other sanitary waste. This new process will tank the unit's effluent allowing for transportation to an anaerobic digestion plant where biogas can be captured and used to create renewable energy. 

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Renewable Hydrogen From Tri-Generation Fuel Cells Included Under California LCFS

By Globe Newswire.

  • Distributed renewable hydrogen solution receives contingent approval for Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) Credit Market to sell or trade credits
  • Using stationary fuel cells to convert biogas from wastewater treatment into renewable hydrogen, power, and heat (tri-generation), offsetting carbon emissions
  • LCFS enhances tri-generation fuel cell economic value proposition while supporting renewable transportation infrastructure and California Senate Bill 1505 (SB 1505)\

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Florida Keys may use gasification of yard waste for electricity generation

By Robert Carr, Waste 360.

The Florida Keys islands, known for their lush tropical palm trees and extensive coral reefs, may sign off on a plan this spring to convert its residents’ yard waste to electricity through gasification, in a cost-saving effort to reduce greenhouse gases.

Monroe County, which encompasses Key West and about 95 percent of the rest of the Keys islands, is finalizing a contract with Annapolis, Md.-based Energy3 LLC to build a gasification plant capable of processing 50,000 tons of organic material. The county had sought an RFP in 2014 to improve the sustainability of its yard waste elimination program, and signed a roughly $7 million contract then with Energy3 to examine building the plant. The county’s Board of Commissioners plan to meet Wednesday with the company to go over final terms for the contract.

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Obama’s energy remark baffles Alaska senators

By Liz Ruskin, Alaska Public Media. 

In his final State of the Union address last night, President Obama never mentioned Alaska or the Arctic, but for a state that’s as dependent on oil as Alaska is, one passage really stood out. It baffled both of Alaska’s senators.

The passage begins with Obama saying it’s time to accelerate the move away from “dirtier” energy.

“Rather than subsidize the past, we should invest in the future, especially in communities that rely on fossil fuels. We do them no favor when we don’t show them where the trends are going. That’s why I’m going to push to change the way we manage our oil and coal resources so that they better reflect the cost they impose on taxpayers, and the planet.”

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NY Administration plans to train 10,000 for clean energy workforce

ALBANY — The state will train a clean-energy workforce of 10,000 to help make New York more reliant on renewables, according to a copy of a Cuomo administration proposal provided to POLITICO New York.

According to an administration source, Cuomo plans to discuss the plan in today's State of the State speech.

Under the proposal, the state will set aside $15 million to train the workforce needed to fill the solar, wind and other jobs expected to be created as New York becomes more reliant on renewable energy. SolarCity, 1366 Technologies and Soraa alone will create about 6,000 jobs in the next few years. 

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Rubio fights cap-and-trade charges

By Timothy Cama, The Hill.

Sen. Marco Rubio’s presidential campaign fought charges Wednesday that he once endorsed a cap-and-trade system to fight climate change.

The charges came after the surfacing of a video from 2008 that appeared to show Rubio, then Speaker of Florida's House, calling for the state’s environmental agency to form a cap-and-trade or tax system for carbon dioxide emissions.

“I'm in favor of giving the Florida Department of Environmental Protection a mandate, that they go out and design a cap-and-trade or a carbon tax program and bring it back to the legislature for ratification sometime in the next two years,” he said on a local public-access television program unearthed by the video first reported by Breitbart News.

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Reports: Ohio energy standard costs lower than previously thought

By Kathiann M. Kowalski, Midwest Energy News.

As Ohio lawmakers continue to debate the state’s renewable energy standards, a pair of recent reports show the costs of complying with the laws are significantly lower than previously thought.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) issued its final alternative energy compliance report for the year 2013 last week on the same day that the Department of Energy announced new reports showing that renewable energy standards produced nationwide benefits worth more than seven times their costs in 2013.

The PUCO’s report “needed to be provided at an earlier date” to lawmakers, because utilities’ average costs for RECs went down significantly from 2012 to 2013, said Neil Waggoner of the Sierra Club.

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Capturing renewable natural gas for the pork industry

By Industrial & Environmental Concepts Inc., via National Hog Farmer.

A Missouri project, believed to be the largest and most comprehensive livestock manure-to-energy of its type in the world, is currently under way. The project efficiently treats waste from approximately 2 million hogs. The farms are being covered by Industrial & Environmental Concepts, a designer and installer of cover systems for wastewater lagoons and tanks. Roeslein Alternative Energy of St. Louis selected IEC to provide the gas collection cover systems to dozens of hog lagoons in northern Missouri.

The covers effectively capture and channel valuable gases that are byproducts of the manure storage on the farms. The collected gas is sent to equipment for scrubbing, cleaning and then compressed into natural gas. The manure is effectively broken down to basic elements, making the nutrients easily available to plants in the form of fertilizer. The benefit of this system is not limited to the creation of natural gas and fertilizer; it also reduces the carbon footprint of the facilities which globally has become an important environmental topic.

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Harvest Power Sells 6 MW Anaerobic Digestion Biogas Plant in Ontario

By Ben Messenger, Waste Management World.

In Ontario, Canada StormFisher Environmental has acquired the London Energy Garden, an anaerobic digester which processes organic waste from southwestern Ontario into biogas and natural fertilisers, from Harvest Ontario Partners – a part of Waltham, Massachusetts based AD developer, Harvest Power.

The facility, which was developed by Harvest Power, turns organic materials such as food scraps, food production residuals, fats oils and grease, and other discarded organic waste from food processors, retailers and food retail outlets into biogas which is used to generate electricity, as well as fertilisers.

StormFisher Environmental is majority owned and operated by StormFisher, Ltd, a company said to have deep Ontario market knowledge and biogas experience. Harvest Power is a minority owner in StormFisher Environmental.

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Could post-Paris climate policy drive growth in carbon trading?

By Madeleine Cuff, Business Green.

Despite optimistic lobbying from business, most people were not expecting the Paris Agreement to deliver much in the way of progress for the international carbon market.

So perhaps one of the big surprises to emerge from the summit was the fact the treaty appeared to provide a long-term boost to carbon markets - not only by setting a clear long-term direction for decarbonisation efforts, but also with the inclusion of specific proposals to enable greater co-operation between different regional carbon markets.

According to the annual Carbon Market Monitor report, released this week by the Point Carbon team of analysts at Thomson Reuters, observers at the UN talks were surprised to see that the treaty "contains clear support" for the creation of new market mechanisms for the transfer of mitigation outcomes.

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