Green Power from Chicken Litter: GTI Uses Gasified Waste to Generate Electricity with a Solid Oxide Fuel Cell
Gas Technology Institute (GTI) has successfully demonstrated that chicken litter can be gasified to produce hydrogen and generate electricity using a solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC). Under a project funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Earth Resources, Inc. (prime contractor), GTI, and the University of Georgia are working to convert chicken litter into energy and fertilizer. As part of this USDA-funded project, GTI conducted a test to demonstrate the suitability of chicken litter as a low-Btu fuel for the SOFC. Litter from poultry farms is traditionally used in land applications as a fertilizer because it is rich in nutrients. But the rise in poultry production combined with the decreasing availability of land and potential deleterious environmental impacts creates concern about traditional litter disposal methods. Gasification has the potential to provide a cost-effective, environmentally benign disposal option for the litter while providing heat, power, fuel (such as hydrogen) and fertilizer. According to Francis Lau, Director of Corporate Development at GTI, “Commercialization and implementation of such a modular technology has the potential to generate on-site power and heat from a renewable source of energy economically while addressing environmental problems caused by traditional disposal practices. Also, chicken litter can replace fossil fuels currently used to provide heat in poultry farms, thus avoiding net generation of CO2. GTI is pursuing the development and commercialization of this technology.”
About GTI GTI is the leading research, development and training organization serving the natural gas industry and energy markets. For more than 60 years, GTI has been meeting the nation's energy and environmental challenges by developing technology-based solutions for consumers, industry, and government. | |||||
For more information, contact gasificationinfo@gastechnology.org | |||||