RNG NEWS

Guest User Guest User

EPA: 21.36 million cellulosic RINs generated in September

By Erin Voegele, Biomass Magazine.

The U.S. EPA has released renewable identification number (RIN) data for September, reporting that nearly 1.6 billion RINs were generated during the month, including nearly 21.36 million cellulosic RINs.

By Erin Voegele, Biomass Magazine.

The U.S. EPA has released renewable identification number (RIN) data for September, reporting that nearly 1.6 billion RINs were generated during the month, including nearly 21.36 million cellulosic RINs.

Nearly 21.36 million D3 cellulosic biofuel RINs were generated in September, bringing the net total for the first nine months of the year to 156.67 million. So far this year 5.31 million D3 RINs have been generated for ethanol, with 96.74 million generated for renewable compressed natural gas and 54.66 million for renewable liquefied natural gas. Approximately 137.1 million D3 RINs have been generated domestically, with 19.6 million generated by importers.

No D7 cellulosic diesel RINs were generated in September. However, a net total 963,050 D7 RINs were generated during the first three quarters of 2017, all for cellulosic heating oil by importers.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Lincoln, NE Mayor Urged to Reconsider Contract Award & Issue RFP for City Biogas-to-Vehicle fuel Project

By  Lincoln Journal Star.

City Councilman Roy Christensen wants Mayor Chris Beutler to reconsider his decision to award a contract to a Nebraska engineering company for work on a biogas-to-vehicle fuel project.

Beutler bypassed the city’s request-for-proposal (RFP) process to award a contract to HDR Inc. for design work on a city-owned and operated process that would convert biogas from the sewage treatment process into compressed natural gas.

By  Lincoln Journal Star.

City Councilman Roy Christensen wants Mayor Chris Beutler to reconsider his decision to award a contract to a Nebraska engineering company for work on a biogas-to-vehicle fuel project.

Beutler bypassed the city’s request-for-proposal (RFP) process to award a contract to HDR Inc. for design work on a city-owned and operated process that would convert biogas from the sewage treatment process into compressed natural gas.

Christensen on Wednesday asked Beutler to reconsider the contract with HDR and instead to use the city’s RFP process.

Christensen has tried to get the city administration to consider using a private company that would build, own and operate the biogas-to-fuel project. The private company would pay the city an annual fee and produce compressed natural gas for city vehicles.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Southern California Edison Unveils Plan to Make Power Grid 80% Carbon-Free by 2030

By Robert Walton, Utility Dive.

Southern California Edison has developed a plan in a new white paper to help California meet its ambitious climate and air quality goals by electrifying the state's transportation, and water and space heating sectors, while also utilizing more carbon-free energy.

By Robert Walton, Utility Dive.

Southern California Edison has developed a plan in a new white paper to help California meet its ambitious climate and air quality goals by electrifying the state's transportation, and water and space heating sectors, while also utilizing more carbon-free energy.

The approach "builds upon existing state programs," the utility said, to help reduce the state's greenhouse gas emissions by 40% from 1990 levels in the next 12 years and 80% by 2050. However, the approach could require a 2% annual increase in power prices. 

The proposal calls for a doubling California's use of carbon-free electricity, from 40% today to 80% by 2030, in part by rolling out more energy storage projects.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Manitoba Rolls Out New Plan to Combat Climate Change

By Journal of Commerce News.

WINNIPEG — Manitoba’s provincial government has announced a Made-in-Manitoba Climate and Green Plan, which was developed after a year of consultations with environmental, business and climate expert stakeholders.

Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister and Sustainable Development Minister Rochelle Squires announce a new Made-in-Manitoba Climate and Green Plan on Oct. 27. 

By Journal of Commerce News.

WINNIPEG — Manitoba’s provincial government has announced a Made-in-Manitoba Climate and Green Plan, which was developed after a year of consultations with environmental, business and climate expert stakeholders.

Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister and Sustainable Development Minister Rochelle Squires announce a new Made-in-Manitoba Climate and Green Plan on Oct. 27. 

One of the main components of the plan is carbon pricing at $25 per tonne starting in 2018, which Manitoba Sustainable Development Minister Rochelle Squires noted will not rise, with a full review of the carbon pricing plan scheduled for 2022.

"Our lower carbon price respects the massive hydro investments Manitobans have made over decades to build one of the cleanest electricity systems in the world," Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister said in a statement.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Three Kings County, CA Dairies Among Eighteen Statewide Farms to Receive Grants to Build Digesters, Mitigate Methane Emissions

By John Lindt, The Sentinel. 

The California Department of Food and Agriculture has awarded $35.2 million in grant funding to 18 dairy digester projects across the state. These projects, part of the Dairy Digester Research and Development Program, will reduce greenhouse gas emissions from manure on California dairy farms.

Projects approved in Kings County include $3 million to Wreden Ranch near Hanford, $3 million to Hanford-area dairy Cloverdale and Hollandia Farms, also of Hanford, awarded $1.5 million. Each dairy had to put up substantially more for their projects in matching funds.

By John Lindt, The Sentinel. 

The California Department of Food and Agriculture has awarded $35.2 million in grant funding to 18 dairy digester projects across the state. These projects, part of the Dairy Digester Research and Development Program, will reduce greenhouse gas emissions from manure on California dairy farms.

Projects approved in Kings County include $3 million to Wreden Ranch near Hanford, $3 million to Hanford-area dairy Cloverdale and Hollandia Farms, also of Hanford, awarded $1.5 million. Each dairy had to put up substantially more for their projects in matching funds.

Dairy manure produces methane when it decomposes. Methane is a powerful greenhouse gas that traps more than 80 times as much heat in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. Dairy digesters help capture methane emissions, which can be used to produce electricity or natural gas.

Each project plans to capture methane emissions from a covered lagoon and transport the gas to a collection point to be converted to biomethane fuel for vehicles. The process turns an airborne pollution problem into a business opportunity.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

EPA Sends Final 2018 RVO Rule to OMB for Review

By Erin Voegele, Biomass Magazine.

The White House Office of Management and Budget is reviewing the U.S. EPA’s final rule to set 2018 Renewable Fuel Standard renewable volume requirements (RVOs), along with the 2019 RVO for biomass-based diesel. OMB review marks a final step before the final rule is released to the public. Under statute, the EPA is required to issue a final rule establishing 2018 RVOs by Nov. 30.

By Erin Voegele, Biomass Magazine.

The White House Office of Management and Budget is reviewing the U.S. EPA’s final rule to set 2018 Renewable Fuel Standard renewable volume requirements (RVOs), along with the 2019 RVO for biomass-based diesel. OMB review marks a final step before the final rule is released to the public. Under statute, the EPA is required to issue a final rule establishing 2018 RVOs by Nov. 30.

The EPA first released its proposal to set 2018 RVOs and the 2019 RVO for biomass-based diesel on July 5. The proposal calls for 19.24 billion gallons of total renewable fuel, including 238 million gallons of cellulosic biofuel, 2.1 billion gallons of biomass-based diesel and 4.24 billion gallons of advanced biofuel. The 2.1 billion gallon biomass-based diesel requirement for 2018 was finalized last year. For 2019, the new proposal calls for the biomass-based diesel RVO to be maintained at 2.1 billion gallons.

When compared to the final RVO for 2017, the requirement for total renewable fuel drops slightly from 19.28 billion gallons to the proposed 19.24 billion gallons. The cellulosic RVO has also been lowered, from 311 million gallons in 2017 to a proposed 238 million gallons in 2018, with the advanced biofuel requirement dropping from 4.28 billion gallons in 2017 to a proposed 4.24 billion gallons in 2018. The final RVO for biomass-based diesel in 2017 was set at 2 billion gallons.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

California Names Two New Climate Change Appointees

Julie Henderson, 55, of San Francisco, has been appointed deputy secretary for climate and health policy at the California Environmental Protection Agency. Henderson served as senior vice president of the Public Affairs Division at the University of California, Office of the President from 2015 to 2017, where she was chief of staff to the senior vice president of external relations from 2013 to 2015. She was a senior advisor in the Office of Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. from 2011 to 2013, special assistant attorney general at the California Department of Justice, Office of the Attorney General from 2008 to 2010 and vice president and associate general counsel at the Gap Inc. from 2000 to 2007. This position does not require Senate confirmation.

Joseph Wall, 26, of Sacramento, has been appointed special assistant for climate change at the California Natural Resources Agency, where he has been an associate governmental program analyst since 2016 and was a staff services analyst from 2015 to 2016 and an executive fellow from 2014 to 2015. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $88,752. Wall is registered without party preference.

Read More
Guest User Guest User

6 trade associations ask NY to withdraw new commercial organics rule

By Cole Rosengren, Waste Dive.

Trade associations from both the waste and food industries recently asked New York's Department of Sanitation (DSNY) to withdraw a proposed commercial organics diversion rule for reconsideration due to multiple concerns. The request came in a letter, submitted ahead of an Oct. 31 hearing on the proposal, that was jointly signed by the National Waste & Recycling Association's local chapter, New Yorkers for Responsible Waste Management, Food Industry Alliance of New York State, New York State Restaurant Association, New York City Hospitality Alliance and National Supermarket Association.

By Cole Rosengren, Waste Dive.

Trade associations from both the waste and food industries recently asked New York's Department of Sanitation (DSNY) to withdraw a proposed commercial organics diversion rule for reconsideration due to multiple concerns. The request came in a letter, submitted ahead of an Oct. 31 hearing on the proposal, that was jointly signed by the National Waste & Recycling Association's local chapter, New Yorkers for Responsible Waste Management, Food Industry Alliance of New York State, New York State Restaurant Association, New York City Hospitality Alliance and National Supermarket Association.

While the letter say these associations "support the city's commitment to the diversion of organic waste," it raises multiple pages' worth of questions about regional processing capacity, stakeholder consultation, costs and other factors. The letter also calls for parallel consideration of a residential organics diversion mandate, in the spirit of mandatory recycling rules throughout the city.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

BTS Bioenergy to Build North American HQ, Two Anaerobic Digestion Facilities in Maryland

By Waste 360.

The Maryland Environmental Service (MES) has entered into a consulting agreement with BTS Bioenergy to begin work for the company on planned projects in Howard County, Md.

By Waste 360.

The Maryland Environmental Service (MES) has entered into a consulting agreement with BTS Bioenergy to begin work for the company on planned projects in Howard County, Md.

BTS Bioenergy will establish the company’s North American headquarters and develop two bio-digestion recycling facilities in Howard County. The Howard County and BTS MOU will result in up to a $40 million investment and the creation of as many as 20 jobs in Howard County. 

The MES and BTS Bioenergy agreement provides support and technical services for the Howard County projects. MES already operates fourteen water and wastewater treatment facilities throughout Howard County, including those at a number of the county’s schools.

Read more...

Read More
Guest User Guest User

Nebraska Landfill Gas Project Could Net County $200K Annually

By Cody Boteler, Waste Dive.

Nebraska-based BioResource Development will begin collecting and cleaning gas from the 160-acre Sarpy County landfill by the end of the year, as reported by the Omaha World-Herald.

The contract was finalized in 2016, after Sarpy County put out a request for proposals to help mitigate the odor coming from the soon-to-be-capped landfill. BioResource Development is installing new wells with vacuums to collect gas, which will be sold to a local utility. Black Hills Energy, the utility that serves the county and will pay for the cleaned methane from the project, has already built a 3.5 mile pipeline to connect the landfill to its larger distribution pipeline.

Read more...

Read More