Calif. Power Company Turns To Cow Power
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. announced plans Thursday to buy natural gas generated from cow manure on California dairy farms.
PG&E officials said the utility signed a deal with Microgy Inc., a subsidiary of Portsmouth, N.H.-based Environmental Power Corp., to buy enough biomethane to power an estimated 50,000 homes.
The agreement represents the PG&E's first purchase of natural gas generated from cow patties. Manure-derived methane could make up a larger share of the San Francisco-based utility's electricity supply if the pilot project is successful, said spokeswoman Darlene Chiu.
The deal could help increase the percentage of PG&E's electricity generated from clean, renewable sources such as wind and solar. Currently, about 12 percent of its electricity comes from renewables. Under state law, state utilities are required to boost that percentage to 20 percent by 2010.
Microgy Inc. plans to build four plants to convert manure into biomethane on large dairy farms in California. Those plants will be connected to PG&E's network of natural gas pipelines.
"The state has no shortage of dairy manure, and it can now be cost-effectively converted into cow power," said Allen Dusault, biofuels project director for the environmental group, Sustainable Conservation. "That makes good environmental and economic sense."
© 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. PG&E officials said the utility signed a deal with Microgy Inc., a subsidiary of Portsmouth, N.H.-based Environmental Power Corp., to buy enough biomethane to power an estimated 50,000 homes.
The agreement represents the PG&E's first purchase of natural gas generated from cow patties. Manure-derived methane could make up a larger share of the San Francisco-based utility's electricity supply if the pilot project is successful, said spokeswoman Darlene Chiu.
The deal could help increase the percentage of PG&E's electricity generated from clean, renewable sources such as wind and solar. Currently, about 12 percent of its electricity comes from renewables. Under state law, state utilities are required to boost that percentage to 20 percent by 2010.
Microgy Inc. plans to build four plants to convert manure into biomethane on large dairy farms in California. Those plants will be connected to PG&E's network of natural gas pipelines.
"The state has no shortage of dairy manure, and it can now be cost-effectively converted into cow power," said Allen Dusault, biofuels project director for the environmental group, Sustainable Conservation. "That makes good environmental and economic sense."
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No longer, as conservation becomes a budget item for households and businesses. Some of the more advanced home energy producers (solar, wind and water) actually sell some of their unused electricity back to the power company.
As budgets go from amber alert to red, government is giving power efficiency a serious review in everything it does and continually sponsors research into energy alternatives. Various humanitiarian NGOs (foundations) promote the idea of biofuels abroad, where even small, remote villages can generate power with a small biomass gas generator.