guardian.co.uk,
Rebecca Smithers, consumer affairs correspondent, Monday 26 September 2011
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The sludge incinerator at the Crossness sewage works, south-east London, where the electricity will be generated. Photograph: Nic Hamilton/Alamy |
They look
like instant coffee granules, but they are in fact sewage flakes – a highly
combustible new renewable form of fuel that burns like woodchip and is being
used for the first time to generate electricity for Britain's largest water and
sewerage company.
Thames Water has begun producing the flakes by drying sludge – the solids found in
sewage – in a purpose-built machine at sewage works in Slough, Berkshire. In a
not-so-green move, the company then takes the flakes by lorry to Crossness
sewage works in Bexley, south-east London, where they are burnt off to generate
electricity.
The company
estimates that 16% of its electricity needs will be covered in the current
financial year by so-called poo power – enough to run about 40,000 average
family homes – from a total energy requirement of 1,300 gigawatt hours.
Until now,
the sludge dryer had been used to reduce waste simply to get rid of it more
conveniently. The dryer promises to reduce the firm's carbon emissions by more
than 500 tonnes a year, as well as bringing up to £300,000 a year of
operational cost benefits.
Rupert
Kruger, Thames Water's head of innovation, said: "This is the first time
in Britain that a waste dryer has been used to create ready-to-burn fuel from
sewage sludge, rather than simply being used as a waste-reducer. This
innovative approach demonstrates our clear intent to help move Britain towards
becoming a low-carbon economy by unlocking every ounce of renewable energy
potential from waste."
Five tonnes
a day of sewage sludge – 20% of the solids left over from the treatment process
at the Slough works – are being put through the new dryer, which works by
heating the sludge to around 180C and driving off the water using enclosed
heated rotating paddles.
A further
20 sewage works, including Slough, generate electricity by burning biomethane
gas from sewage, a process know as combined heat and power.
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