![](https://trustforsustainableliving.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/64-460x300.jpg)
Methane Digesters (Small)
Electricity Generation
At backyard- and farmyard-scale, anaerobic digesters are used to manage organic waste. They control methane emissions, while producing biogas (an energy source) and digestate (nutrient-rich fertilizer).
Rank and results by 2050 #64
Methane Digesters (Small)
Reduced CO2: | 2 gigatons |
---|---|
Net cost (Billions US$): | $15.50 |
Net operational savings: | $13.90 billion |
TOTAL CO2-EQ REDUCTION (GT)
Total CO2-equivalent reduction in atmospheric greenhouse gases by 2050 (gigatons)
NET COST (billions US $)
Net cost to implement
SAVINGS (billions US $)
Net savings by 2050
Impact:
We project that by 2050, small digesters can replace 57.5 million inefficient cookstoves in low-income economies, resulting in 1.9 gigatons of carbon dioxide emissions avoided at a cost of $15.5 billion. If you couple this impact with that of large methane digesters, the cumulative result is 10.3 gigatons of carbon dioxide emissions avoided.
![](https://trustforsustainableliving.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/64-460x300.jpg)
Methane Digesters (Small)
Electricity Generation
At backyard- and farmyard-scale, anaerobic digesters are used to manage organic waste. They control methane emissions, while producing biogas (an energy source) and digestate (nutrient-rich fertilizer).
Agricultural, industrial, and human digestion processes create an ongoing (and growing) stream of organic refuse. Without thoughtful management, organic wastes can emit fugitive methane gases as they decompose. Methane creates a warming effect 34 times stronger than carbon dioxide over one hundred years.
One option is to control decomposition of organic waste in sealed tanks called anaerobic digesters. They harness the power of microbes to transform scraps and sludge and produce two main products: biogas, an energy source, and solids called digestate, a nutrient-rich fertilizer. The digestion process unfolds continuously, so long as feedstock supplies are sustained and the microorganisms remain happy.
Anaerobic digestion is used in backyards and farmyards around the world, and that use is on the rise. Small-scale digesters dominate in Asia. More than 100 million people in rural China have access to digester gas, which is used for cooking, lighting, and heating. In fact, during his years in ancient China, Marco Polo encountered covered sewage tanks that produced cooking fuel.
Biogas can reduce demand for wood, charcoal, and dung as fuel sources and therefore their noxious fumes, which impact both planetary and human health. Digestate enriches home gardens and small agricultural plots.