Monday, December 30, 2013
A world-first technology is turning tonnes of waste into bio-fuel and could transform the way the Kingdom approaches agriculture.
Southeast Asia GLOBE
DECEMBER 2013
DECEMBER 2013
A world-fist technology is turning tonnes of waste
into bio-fuel and could transform the way the
Kingdom approaches agriculture
By Amanda Saxton
A top a massive furnace billowing with heat, one can peer
through the flue into the inferno. It is a mesmerizing sight: waves of flame
keep rice husk wheeling, condemned to an embodiment of the bible’s “eternal
fire”.
Adisorn Chieu, the Cambodia
managing director of local producer Angkor Rice, stands nearby. “TORBED”
technology is the future of rice husk technology,” He says, confident that this
huge reactor – the first of its kind installed anywhere in the world will
revolutionize Cambodia’s rice industry.
Despite the status of rice as
Cambodia’s undoubted food staple, the Kingdom’s rice industry lags behind that
of its neighbors in term of both production and processing. Viet Nam can grow
up to ten tonnes of rice per hectare, While Cambodia produces just three.
According to figure from the
Ministry of commerce, rice exports doubled in the first seven months of this
year. To keep up, the processing sector requires revolution. The rice industry
misses out on premium export price because mills cannot cope with the
increasing supply, meaning unprocessed rice is sold for nominal prices to
Vietnam, where processing costs are minimal.
Rice mills, along with most
Cambodians, are crippled by the cost and supply of electricity, with prices
more than twice that of neighboring Vietnam. Most rice millers have their own
diesel generators to ensure consistent power, but these are dirty, barely
cheaper and do nothing to mitigate waste. Hence a revolution is indeed taking
place, with mills turning to their own waste to power operations.
Rice husks constitute about 20%
of rice’s weight and are a mill’s main waste product. Currently, they are often burned in the open
or dumped in rivers, where they release methane as they decay. However, they
make perfect biofuel for gasifies – converters that can power small- and
medium-sized plants by turning waste products into energy. The requisite gasifier
systems’ initial costs depend on the size and make of machinery, but
emancipation from the expensive grid reduces dependency on diesel to about 30%
of most producer power needs. In theory,
gasifier systems allow a rice mill to cut its electricity costs in half.
A lake of capital provides the
main barrier to jumping on this renewable energy bandwagon. Hence organization such
as SNV, a development body from the Netherlands, step in to find financing
option for the mills. Together with SME renewable energy, the Cambodia business
selling gasifiers, they promote the technology to rice millers throughout
Cambodia.
According to Ira Larasaty, SNV’s waste-
to-energy program leader, “copycat gasifiers” pose a different type of problem:
Their lake of quality renders them prone to breakdown, which sabotages the
system’s reputation for efficiency and cost-reduction. Furthermore, bio-char is
a waste product produced by gasifiers that can contaminate water and soil
without proper treatment, while burnt rice husks contain levels of crystalline
silica, which is carcinogenic.
Future machine: Angkor Rice has embraced the expensive and
large-scaled TORBED technology (above); a schematic diagram
of the gasifier process (below)
large-scaled TORBED technology (above); a schematic diagram
of the gasifier process (below)
“Accumulated
solid waste is an issue that needs attention…. Most millers do not apply any
treatment to gasifier wastes due to a lake of funding and lake of support,”
said Larasaty. “One of the objectives is
to introduce a technology that is environmentally responsible and sustainable.
This can be achieved by joining force with technology provider who are
confident and can demonstrate that their systems are efficient and cost
effective.”
For Large mills with capital
aplenty, the TORBED reactor solves both electricity and waste problem. At
Angkor rice headquarters near Phnom Penh, this multimillion-dollar, two
megawatt power plant stands adjacent to it processing mill. Tonnes of
stockpiled rice husk is conveyed into the furnace and burnt evenly at about
760c.
The operation is dauntingly high-tech,
although it retains some Cambodian character: Above the buttons and knobs,
dials and monitors, there hangs a golden Buddhist shine. According to Adisorn
Chieu, this reactor halves the mill’s costs and they are plant to build
another.
Unlike gasifiers and alternative
large scale power generators in Cambodia, the TORBED reactor burns husks very
evenly, resulting in amorphous silica, which , crucially, is non-carcinogenic
and can be sold as a product in itself for use in the construction industry.
The reactor also eliminates the need for diesel, making it a particularly
eco-friendly power generator.
However, the convoluted technology
means the team at Angkor Rice are dependent on knowhow and resource from abroad.
“[TORBED technology] is the promising and potential for larger plants is huge
as long as the support systems – trained operators, maintenance, funding etc –
are implemented,” said Larasaty.
Biofuel from rice husks could
play an important role in two of Cambodia’s projected goals. By increasing mills’s
efficiency, the government’s aim to export one million tonnes of rice in 2015
could be realized, and with excess power from gasifiers and the TORBED reactor
being sold to villager, biofuel could help the government’s scheme to electrify
70% of households by 2030.
“With gasifiers there is some
failure, some success,” said Chieu. “TORBED is perfect for us, because here in
Cambodia we have high electricity costs and plenty of rice husks.”
Monday, December 23, 2013
Torftech Energy’s Malaysian JV signs MOU for a second 5MWe Rice Husk power plant in Cambodia
Angkor Kasekamroong Roeung Co Ltd (“Angkor”) and TORCHE Energy Sdn Bhd signed an MOU to develop Cambodia’s second TORBED based combustion system utilizing rice husk as a fuel.
Torftech Energy is supplying its “state-of-the-art” TORBED based combustion system utilizing rice husk as fuel to generate electricity at all of these new plants in Cambodia. These TORBED combustion systems will be manufactured and supplied through Torftech Energy’s newly formed Malaysian Joint Venture, TORCHE, which will also provide the Engineering, Procurement and Construction for the project.
The same unique proposition saw recent success in Vietnam; where the opportunity to produce a non-hazardous high quality ash helped win a pipeline of projects for Torftech Energy. The production of such an ash provides considerable advantages over conventional combustion plants as the ash can be used as a cement substitute for enhancing concrete strength. The ash generated, using the proprietary TORBED combustion technology developed by Torftech from United Kingdom, has the trade mark ‘Agrisilica’ that guarantees its quality and enables the export of the ash to major economies in the region. This is one of the key factors that permit the additional investment costs that result when using more advanced European Technology.
Mr Jeffrey Lamb, Head of UK Trade & Investment in Vietnam, witnessed the signing and commented; “It is fantastic to see Torftech Energy being so successful in South East Asia and providing a low carbon solution to both a waste and an energy security issue. It is especially encouraging to see an innovative British company developing strong partnerships across multiple countries in the region.”
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