RNG NEWS
Stay up to date with the latest stories, insights, and announcements.
Waste Management unveils $30M sustainability infrastructure at Outer Loop facility
By Michael L. Jones, Insider Louisville.
Waste Management unveiled a new $30 million renewal energy infrastructure Tuesday at the Outer Loop Recycling and Disposal Facility.
Tim Wells, area vice president of Waste Management, told the crowd at the ribbon-cutting ceremony that the new technology is part of the waste disposal company’s commitment to reduce harmful emissions.
RFS Changes on Hold After Senators from Biofuels States Appeal to President Trump
By Kelsey Tamborrino, with help from Ben Lefebvre, Emily Holden, Anthony Adragna, Annie Snider and Sarah Ferris.
ASSUME DEAL DEAD: Sen. Joni Ernst's decision to lay into embattled EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt over his alleged about-face on ethanol appears to have paid off. Ernst spoke to President Donald Trump Tuesday night, she wrote on Twitter, and he "just assured me he ‘won’t sign a deal that’s bad for farmers!‘ Thank you, Mr. President!“
White House expected to announce compromise on biofuels: sources
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump administration is expected on Monday to announce changes in biofuels policies, including a plan to count ethanol exports toward federal biofuels usage quotas and allowing year-round sale of fuels with a higher blend of ethanol, two sources briefed on the matter said.
By Jarrett Renshaw & Chris Prentice.
Study: Upgrading Biogas a More Efficient Method for Companies than Combustion
By Bioenergy Insight.
Scientists from Ghent University in Belgium have found that burning biogas is the least cost-effective way to use the product. Instead, they propose using biogas as the raw material for the production of chemicals. This approach, according to the researchers, has advantages for businesses, governments and the environment.
"Combustion has always been the easy solution to convert raw material into energy", says Professor Korneel Rabaey. "But only a third of the energy in biogas can be turned into electricity. The other two thirds gets lost as residual heat."
Evolving Natural Gas to a Low Carbon Future
Recently, British Columbia released its revised greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions legislation for the next three decades.
To meet their targets, government, business and citizens must re-examine their use of energy to understand their environmental impact and adapt their usage appropriately. Companies like FortisBC have a similar obligation to evolve their offerings to help customers meet the needs of a low-carbon energy landscape.
By Business In Vancouver.
St. Petersburg in Talks About Using RNG from Wastewater to Fuel Sanitation Trucks
By Caitlin Johnston, Tampa Bay Times.
ST. PETERSBURG — City officials have had two meetings with representatives from TECO Peoples Gas this month to determine whether its possible to use natural gas to power its sanitation trucks.
The renewable energy would come from a $93.6 million biosolids project that the city has been working on for seven years. Now set to be completed in June 2019, the project is designed to convert wastewater byproducts into methane gas at the Southwest Water Reclamation Facility next to Eckerd College.
The goal is for that biogas to then integrated into the natural gas distribution system for TECO Peoples Gas.
Reuters: U.S. EPA grants refiners biofuel credits to remedy Obama-era waiver denials
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has awarded tens of millions of dollars worth of biofuel blending credits for this year to refiners HollyFrontier and Sinclair Oil after they argued the agency had wrongly denied them waivers from the country’s biofuels law as far back as 2014, according to two sources and public filings.
By Chris Prentice, Jarrett Renshaw, Reuters.
Chevron Shareholders Made Methane A Key Priority At Annual General Meeting
Kate Gaumond, EDF, via Forbes.
May 31 - Yesterday morning at Chevron’s annual general meeting, a shareholder resolution calling on the company to improve its methane management and disclosure received a 45% vote. This strong vote follows a majority vote at Range Resources, where 50.3% of voting shareholders supported a similar methane disclosure resolution (up from just 20% in 2013). Oil and gas industry shareholders are sending a powerful message– methane is a material risk that companies must manage to compete in a capital- and climate-constrained world.
Such resolutions are effective at driving change, even for non-majority votes like the 38% of shareholders at Kinder Morgan who supported a methane resolution. For example, last year ExxonMobil’s methane resolution received a 39% vote, and the company responded with a new methane emissions production program, which now includes a quantitative methane reduction target.
BC city using biofuel to power waste management system
Surrey Biofuel Facility sets new bar in waste management.
May 28, 2018 - A new state-of-the-art facility is calling British Columbia home as Renewi Canada and the City of Surrey open North America’s first integrated closed-loop organic waste management system.
Used to produce renewable natural gas (RNG) and compost soil amenders, the Surrey Biofuel Facility (SBF) takes curb-side organic waste and converts it into fuel for the city’s fleet of natural gas vehicles. The $68-million facility, located in Metro Vancouver, opened March 9, 2018, and is expected to produce roughly 120,000 gigajoules of RNG and 45,000 tonnes of compost annually.
By Lesley Allen, Canadian Biomass Magazine.
King County’s Biofuel Facility a Boon for Region’s Economy and Emissions Reductions
By Betsy Lillian, NGT News.
At its South Treatment Plant in Renton, King County, Wash., is reaping the benefits of purifying biogas into renewable natural gas (RNG) for use by commercial vehicles.
According to a press release from the county, RNG sales yielded more than $6 million in revenue for King County’s Wastewater Treatment Division in 2017.
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